Seismic Swarm in the Kermadec Islands Region: October 2024 Analysis
A seismic swarm designated PS20241016.1 occurred in the Kermadec Islands region from 19:51 on 15 October 2024 to 04:20 on 17 October 2024. Over this 32-hour 29-minute period, seven earthquakes were recorded, with magnitudes ranging from 4.5 to 5.2 and focal depths consistently at 10 km. The sequence began with a magnitude 5.0 event and included subsequent shocks of 5.2, 5.2, 5.1, 4.5, 5.2, and 5.1. Such swarms represent clusters of seismicity without a dominant mainshock, often reflecting distributed stress release along fault systems.
The Kermadec Islands occupy a tectonically active segment of the Pacific Ring of Fire. They form part of the Kermadec-Tonga subduction zone, where the Pacific Plate converges with and subducts beneath the Australian Plate at rates exceeding 5 cm per year. This process generates the Kermadec Trench, one of the world's deepest oceanic trenches, and drives frequent shallow to intermediate-depth earthquakes. The islands themselves consist of volcanic edifices resulting from arc magmatism associated with slab dehydration and partial melting in the mantle wedge.
Historical records indicate that the region experiences recurrent seismic swarms. Since 2000, twenty-four such events have been documented, distributed across multiple years including 2003 (two swarms), 2004 (two), 2005 (one), 2006 (one), 2008 (three), 2012 (one), 2014 (two), 2016 (two), 2019 (three), 2021 (five), 2022 (one), and 2023 (one). These episodes underscore persistent tectonic strain accumulation and release within the subduction interface and overlying crust.
The October 2024 swarm aligns with the area's characteristic shallow seismicity, where events at depths around 10 km typically occur on or near the plate boundary or within the upper plate. No significant damage or tsunami generation was associated with these moderate-magnitude shocks, consistent with the offshore location and limited energy release. Continued monitoring remains essential given the subduction zone's potential for larger events.
References: USGS Earthquake Hazards Program – Kermadec-Tonga subduction zone overview GNS Science – New Zealand and Southwest Pacific seismicity reports NOAA Pacific Tsunami Warning Center – Regional tectonic summaries