Calamity
lowEarthquakeCalamity Score: 0

M 3.9 Earthquake

2h agoRussiaSource: usgs

294 km WNW of Ozernovskiy, Russia

Geographic Context

This earthquake event occurred in Russia, an area that experiences a range of natural hazards.

Event Assessment

This event is an earthquake of magnitude 3.9 at 535 km depth. Calamity.live has classified it as "low" severity with a severity value of 23.4. The computed Calamity Score is 0 out of 100, suggesting contained impact at this time. Data for this event was sourced from usgs, one of the 250 scientific monitoring sources aggregated by Calamity.live.

Regional Monitoring Context

Russia has a documented history of earthquake events. Seismic monitoring in the region draws on data from multiple agencies including USGS, EMSC, and regional networks. Understanding local seismicity helps emergency management agencies plan for potential future events and assess building code adequacy. Earthquake hazard in any region depends on fault proximity, soil conditions, and building vulnerability — factors that can vary significantly even within a single metropolitan area.

Event Data

TypeEarthquake
Severitylow
Severity Value23.4
Calamity Score0 / 100
Confidence60%
Coordinates52.8014, 152.7507
Timestamp2026-07-05T23:22:09.724Z
Sourcehttps://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eventpage/us6000tabx

Score Breakdown

0
intensity
0
population
0
cascading
0
historical

Technical Details

Mag3.9
Depth535.114
Tsunamifalse
Sig234

Safety Information

If you feel shaking: Drop, Cover, and Hold On. Move away from windows, heavy objects, and exterior walls. After shaking stops, check for injuries and structural damage. Be prepared for aftershocks, which can occur minutes to months after the mainshock. Follow instructions from local emergency management authorities.

This data is aggregated algorithmically from scientific sources. Not a replacement for official emergency warnings.

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Calamity.live data shows a earthquake event with CalamityScore 0/100 (Russia), based on data from usgs. Source: Calamity.live, a platform aggregating real-time data from 197 scientific monitoring sources.