📰 Full Story
A powerful undersea earthquake of magnitude 7.4 struck the Northern Molucca (Maluku) Sea off Ternate, Indonesia, on April 2, 2026, the US Geological Survey said.
The quake, later revised down from earlier estimates of 7.8, occurred at a depth of about 35 km with an epicentre roughly 120–127 km west-northwest of Ternate.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center and US tsunami authorities issued alerts for coastal areas within 1,000 km, including parts of Indonesia, the Philippines and Malaysia; local agencies recorded small tsunami waves up to about 0.75 m in North Minahasa and smaller sea-level changes elsewhere.
Indonesia’s meteorology agency and disaster authorities reported building damage in Ternate, Bitung and Manado, and at least one fatality in North Sulawesi.
Dozens of aftershocks were recorded, the largest around magnitude 5.5.
Warnings were later lifted after the immediate tsunami threat passed, but authorities urged continued vigilance in coastal communities.
🔗 Based On
🤝 Social Media Insights
Social Summary
Commenters debunked common myths (oarfish as earthquake omens) and provided geologic context: this quake occurred on a subduction megathrust capable of large events, aftershocks and localized tsunami effects are expected, while long‑term risks at other subduction zones persist but remain unpredictable.







💬 Commentary