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Location:
Period:
5 Mar 2003 11:16:15 - 6 Mar 2003 13:44:09 (1 day 2 hours 27 minutes)
Volcanoes in 100km radius:
None
Earthquakes:
35
65 swarms found nearby.
2001
S20011031.1(29.9km)
31 Oct
10 days 17 hours
471 earthquakes
2002
S20021024.3(24.2km)
23 Oct
2 days 17 hours
38 earthquakes
2005
S20050612.1(24.8km)
12 Jun
26 days 19 hours
904 earthquakes
S20050820.1(26.0km)
19 Aug
3 days 23 hours
96 earthquakes
2009
25 Jul
1 day 19 hours
29 earthquakes
2010
S20100708.1(27.0km)
7 Jul
35 days 19 hours
1709 earthquakes
S20101203.2(25.9km)
2 Dec
10 days 0 hours
68 earthquakes
2011
1 Feb
1 day 18 hours
43 earthquakes
S20110416.1(21.7km)
15 Apr
7 days 6 hours
90 earthquakes
S20110727.1(24.8km)
26 Jul
4 days 1 hours
42 earthquakes
2012
S20120630.1(28.3km)
29 Jun
2 days 0 hours
31 earthquakes
2013
S20130922.1(26.2km)
21 Sep
8 days 10 hours
91 earthquakes
2014
26 Jan
2 days 4 hours
38 earthquakes
S20140418.1(12.1km)
18 Apr
8 days 7 hours
191 earthquakes
9 May
2 days 9 hours
44 earthquakes
S20140808.1(29.6km)
7 Aug
1 day 13 hours
28 earthquakes
2015
10 Feb
12 days 21 hours
168 earthquakes
S20150401.1(27.8km)
31 Mar
38 days 7 hours
543 earthquakes
2016
S20160610.1(29.7km)
9 Jun
33 days 4 hours
1773 earthquakes
14 Jun
7 days 5 hours
80 earthquakes
S20160720.2(27.7km)
19 Jul
6 days 5 hours
68 earthquakes
S20161026.1(29.8km)
25 Oct
5 days 21 hours
73 earthquakes
21 Dec
1 day 21 hours
34 earthquakes
S20161230.1(24.2km)
29 Dec
4 days 7 hours
48 earthquakes
2017
S20170503.1(18.0km)
2 May
5 days 5 hours
91 earthquakes
S20170510.1(17.2km)
9 May
15 days 6 hours
129 earthquakes
8 Jun
3 days 22 hours
61 earthquakes
S20170727.1(18.4km)
26 Jul
14 days 9 hours
192 earthquakes
S20170907.1(17.1km)
6 Sep
14 days 21 hours
245 earthquakes
25 Sep
124 days 21 hours
2217 earthquakes
2018
2 Feb
28 days 21 hours
426 earthquakes
S20180305.1(15.7km)
4 Mar
19 days 17 hours
203 earthquakes
S20180403.1(17.4km)
2 Apr
10 days 14 hours
197 earthquakes
S20180420.1(17.8km)
19 Apr
69 days 21 hours
1109 earthquakes
26 May
4 days 20 hours
54 earthquakes
S20180630.1(17.8km)
29 Jun
41 days 14 hours
582 earthquakes
S20180811.1(17.0km)
11 Aug
209 days 15 hours
6032 earthquakes
2019
S20190328.1(19.8km)
27 Mar
5 days 20 hours
79 earthquakes
S20190426.1(17.3km)
25 Apr
1 day 22 hours
37 earthquakes
2020
S20200109.1(10.9km)
8 Jan
11 days 9 hours
159 earthquakes
S20200122.1(17.0km)
21 Jan
3 days 12 hours
57 earthquakes
1 Feb
8 days 17 hours
147 earthquakes
29 Feb
6 days 16 hours
67 earthquakes
S20200526.3(10.9km)
25 May
7 days 18 hours
100 earthquakes
S20200607.1(16.1km)
6 Jun
9 days 19 hours
109 earthquakes
S20200703.1(15.8km)
2 Jul
3 days 16 hours
70 earthquakes
S20200708.1(17.5km)
7 Jul
26 days 8 hours
287 earthquakes
25 Sep
3 days 10 hours
42 earthquakes
18 Dec
5 days 0 hours
66 earthquakes
2021
27 Mar
2 days 21 hours
33 earthquakes
26 Apr
5 days 5 hours
80 earthquakes
S20210609.1(18.2km)
8 Jun
5 days 16 hours
126 earthquakes
20 Sep
8 days 7 hours
216 earthquakes
2022
18 Apr
8 days 1 hours
76 earthquakes
S20220519.2(28.2km)
18 May
1 day 8 hours
29 earthquakes
1 Jul
3 days 23 hours
49 earthquakes
S20220922.1(28.8km)
22 Sep
1 day 18 hours
31 earthquakes
S20220930.2(28.7km)
29 Sep
4 days 5 hours
69 earthquakes
25 Oct
1 day 10 hours
35 earthquakes
2023
S20230221.1(11.3km)
20 Feb
1 day 17 hours
25 earthquakes
S20230305.1(21.9km)
5 Mar
1 day 2 hours
25 earthquakes
25 Mar
2 days 6 hours
38 earthquakes
2024
28 Aug
2 days 1 hours
31 earthquakes
2025
S20250516.1(12.0km)
16 May
4 days 7 hours
45 earthquakes
28 Nov
7 days 2 hours
82 earthquakes
AI-generated article — for informational and entertainment purposes only. May contain inaccuracies. Full disclaimerFound an error?

Seismic Swarm S20030306.1: Analysis of Activity Near Idyllwild, California

A seismic swarm designated S20030306.1 occurred 10 km south of Idyllwild, California, from 11:16 on 5 March 2003 to 13:44 on 6 March 2003. Over 26 hours and 27 minutes, the sequence produced 35 earthquakes, all of low magnitude and consistent with typical swarm behavior in the region. No single mainshock dominated the event; instead, activity consisted of numerous small events clustered closely in time and space.

The recorded events ranged in magnitude from 0.3 to 1.8, with the largest reaching 1.8 at 23:02 on 5 March. Focal depths remained between 12 km and 17 km, indicating a relatively deep source zone within the seismogenic crust. The sequence began with a 0.8-magnitude event at 17 km depth and concluded with a 0.9-magnitude event at 13 km depth. Intermediate events showed minor fluctuations in both magnitude and depth but remained tightly grouped, a hallmark of swarm-type seismicity rather than a classic foreshock-mainshock-aftershock pattern.

Idyllwild lies within the San Jacinto Mountains of the Peninsular Ranges, a region underlain by Mesozoic granitic rocks of the Peninsular Ranges batholith. The area is situated near the San Jacinto Fault Zone, one of the most active strands of the San Andreas transform system. Right-lateral strike-slip motion along this fault accommodates a significant portion of Pacific-North American plate boundary deformation. Historical seismicity in the zone includes numerous moderate earthquakes, reflecting the fault’s high slip rate and capacity for both isolated events and clustered swarm activity.

Swarm events in this tectonic setting commonly arise from fluid migration or aseismic slip transients that trigger distributed brittle failure without producing a dominant rupture. The 2003 sequence fits this model, with its modest magnitudes and lack of felt reports aligning with background microseismicity levels observed along the San Jacinto Fault. Since 2000, two additional swarms have been classified in the immediate vicinity, occurring in 2001 and 2002, underscoring the recurrent nature of such clusters in the area.

Regional monitoring by the Southern California Seismic Network continues to track microseismicity along the fault zone. Updated catalogs confirm that the San Jacinto Fault remains capable of producing both swarms and larger earthquakes, consistent with its long-term slip rate of several millimeters per year. The 2003 swarm provides a representative example of the low-level, clustered activity that characterizes much of the fault’s seismic output between major events.

References

  • Southern California Seismic Network event catalogs
  • USGS Quaternary Fault and Fold Database
  • California Geological Survey regional geologic maps