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Natural Resources Canada > Earth Sciences Sector > Priorities > Geoscape Canada > Vancouver
Geoscape Vancouver
Earthquake!!

On shaky ground

Plates & Quakes

An earthquake is the result of a sudden release of energy when rocks under stress slide abruptly past one another along a break in the Earth's crust (fault). Most earthquakes occur where the large rigid plates that make up the outer shell of the Earth are in contact with one another.

Block diagram of southwest B.C. showing the Juan de Fuca plate descending beneath North America along a subduction zone.
Block diagram of southwest B.C. showing the Juan de Fuca plate descending beneath North America along a subduction zone.
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[GIF, 122.3 kb, 1000 X 891, notice]

Where Earthquakes Happen

There is an average of one earthquake in southwest B.C. every day. Nearly all are too small to be felt, but a damaging earthquake occurs somewhere in the region about once every 20 years. The largest earthquake in this century was a magnitude 7.3 event in 1946, centred beneath central Vancouver Island. Were this earthquake to occur today under Vancouver, damage would be in the billions of dollars. Recently, scientists have recognized a history of infrequent, but great (magnitude 8 to 9) earthquakes on the fault separating the subducting Juan de Fuca and North America plates. The last great earthquake in 1700 AD affected the entire coast from northern California to southern B.C.

Quake Damage

The effect of an earthquake includes ground shaking, landslides, and liquefaction (change of sediment from a solid to a quicksand-like liquid state). Earthquakes are most destructive when they are centered near cities, but the damage can differ considerably from site to site because of local geological conditions. For example, shaking on loose sediment is likely to be greater than shaking on bedrock. Some earthquakes trigger destructive sea waves (tsunamis) that can surge hundreds of metres inland, have heights of 10 m or more, and cause loss of life and severe property damage. In southwest B.C., the tsunami threat is greatest on the outer coast of Vancouver Island.

Earthquakes cannot be prevented. However, the damage they cause can be reduced through geological and geophysical studies that contribute to proper design of buildings and other structures, emergency planning, and public education. Geological mapping can identify areas of possible severe ground shaking, liquefaction, or landslides.

Earthquakes Felt In Vancouver

~1700 ADwest of Vancouver Islandmagnitude 8+ (great earthquake; native villages destroyed)
Dec. 15, 1872north-central Washingtonmagnitude 7.4 (felt strongly on the Lower Mainland)
Jan. 11, 1909San Juan Islandsmagnitude 6 (felt strongly in Lower Mainland)
Dec. 6, 1918Vancouver Islandmagnitude 7 (damage on west coast of Vancouver Isl.)
Jan. 24, 1920San Juan Islandsmagnitude 5.5 (felt strongly in the Lower Mainland)
June 23, 1946Vancouver Islandmagnitude 7.3 (much damage on central Vancouver Isl.)
April 13, 1949Puget Lowlandmagnitude 7 (much damage in Seattle and Tacoma)
April 29, 1965Puget Lowlandmagnitude 6.5 (much damage in Seattle)
Nov. 30, 1975Strait of Georgiamagnitude 4.9 (many aftershocks)
May 16, 1976southern Gulf Islandsmagnitude 5.4
April 14, 1990Fraser Lowlandmagnitude 4.9 (many aftershocks)
May 3, 1996east of Seattlemagnitude 5.5 (felt in the Lower Mainland)

2005-12-08Important notices