M3.3 Earthquake 108 km WNW of Yakutat, Alaska — July 15, 2026
2026-07-15 17:17:07 UTC (1 hour ago) · approx. 8:17 AM UTC-9 local
On July 15, 2026 at 17:17 UTC, a magnitude 3.3 shallow crustal earthquake struck 108 km WNW of Yakutat, Alaska, at a depth of 0.2 km and coordinates 59.9350°, -141.4880°.
Physical scale: An earthquake of magnitude 3.3 releases seismic energy equivalent to roughly 1.3 metric tons of TNT. Empirical fault-scaling laws (Wells & Coppersmith, 1994) estimate the subsurface rupture length at approximately 114 m — a useful intuition for the size of the slip patch on the fault.

ShakeMap — predicted shaking intensity
Modeled ground-motion intensity contoured on the Modified Mercalli scale (MMI). Computed by the USGS from the moment-tensor solution and regional ground-motion prediction equations.

Source: U.S. Geological Survey ShakeMap. View interactive ShakeMap on USGS
Earthquake Details
-141.4880°E
Technical Information
Nearby Earthquakes (Last 7 Days)
Common Questions
How strong was the magnitude 3.3 earthquake near Yakutat, Alaska?
The magnitude 3.3 earthquake that struck 108 km WNW of Yakutat, Alaska on July 15, 2026 at 17:17 UTC had a depth of 0.2 km. For context, this was a minor earthquake typically detected only by instruments.
Were there aftershocks?
Aftershock activity is monitored continuously by the USGS. Aftershock sequences from magnitude 3.3 earthquakes can continue for several days and gradually diminish over time.
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Understanding This Data
Magnitude 3.3 earthquakes are typically only recorded by instruments.
Authoritative source: USGS event page (event ID: aka2026nxmwde). All scientific values on this page are sourced verbatim from the USGS feed.
Cite this page: EarthquakeTracker.org. (2026, July 15, 2026). M3.3 Earthquake 108 km WNW of Yakutat, Alaska — July 15, 2026. Retrieved July 15, 2026 from https://www.earthquaketracker.org/earthquakes/event/aka2026nxmwde/