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Location:
Period:
3 Feb 2020 14:23:05 - 6 Feb 2020 16:02:16 (3 days 1 hour 39 minutes)
Volcanoes in 100km radius:
None
Earthquakes:
38
5 swarms found nearby.
2007
S20070209.1(10.9km)
9 Feb
2 days 16 hours
53 earthquakes
S20070221.1(11.8km)
21 Feb
5 days 5 hours
124 earthquakes
28 Feb
3 days 3 hours
44 earthquakes
2020
24 Jan
5 days 7 hours
99 earthquakes
2023
PS20230206.2(75.1km)
6 Feb
1 day 8 hours
14 earthquakes
AI-generated article — for informational and entertainment purposes only. May contain inaccuracies. Full disclaimerFound an error?

Seismic Swarm S20200204.1: Eastern Turkey, February 2020

Eastern Turkey lies within a tectonically active zone shaped by the ongoing collision between the Arabian and Eurasian plates. This convergence drives significant deformation across the region, primarily accommodated by strike-slip faulting along the East Anatolian Fault Zone and related structures. The area experiences frequent seismic activity, with shallow crustal events common due to the complex interplay of regional faults and crustal shortening.

The swarm designated S20200204.1 was recorded in this setting, beginning at 14:23 on 3 February 2020 and concluding at 16:02 on 6 February 2020. Over 73 hours and 39 minutes, 38 earthquakes were registered. Event magnitudes ranged from 2.0 to 4.3, with the largest shock occurring on 3 February at 22:19. Depths remained predominantly shallow, between 2 km and 19 km, consistent with activity along upper-crustal faults.

Analysis of the sequence reveals a clustered pattern typical of swarms, where numerous events occur without a single dominant mainshock-aftershock progression. Initial activity on 3 February included several events of magnitude 2.5–3.2 within the first hours, followed by the peak magnitude 4.3 shock. Subsequent days showed sustained lower-magnitude releases, with events distributed across depths of 3–14 km on 4 and 5 February before tapering on 6 February. This temporal distribution indicates episodic energy release driven by localized stress adjustments rather than a singular rupture.

Earthquake swarms in Eastern Turkey often reflect fluid migration or aseismic slip along fault segments within the broader plate-boundary system. The 38 events documented here illustrate such behavior, with the majority of magnitudes below 3.0 and only isolated occurrences exceeding 3.5. Depths clustered near 7 km for many events suggest nucleation within a narrow crustal layer influenced by regional fault geometry.

Historical records since 2000 indicate four swarms in the region. Three occurred in 2007, and one in 2020. These episodes underscore the recurrent nature of swarm activity amid the persistent tectonic loading of Eastern Turkey’s fault networks.

References

SeismoSight internal swarm classification S20200204.1
USGS Earthquake Hazards Program – Eastern Turkey tectonics
EMSC Regional Seismicity Reports – Anatolian Plate Boundary