The Earth Has Been Shaken By 466,742 Earthquakes So Far In 2025

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by Michael Snyder, End Of The American Dream:

Have you noticed that our planet has been shaking a lot lately? The magnitude 7.8 earthquake that just hit Russia’s Kamchatka peninsula is just one of the 466,742 earthquakes that have rattled the giant space rock that we all live on this year. Simultaneously, dozens of volcanoes have been erupting and there have been all sorts of very unusual events in the heavens. If you think that what we are experiencing is “normal”, you probably have not been paying much attention.

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Earlier today, I went to Volcano Discovery, and I learned that there have been 466,742 earthquakes so far in 2025…

  • 1 quake above magnitude 8
  • 11 quakes between magnitude 7 and 8
  • 105 quakes between magnitude 6 and 7
  • 1,545 quakes between magnitude 5 and 6
  • 11,611 quakes between magnitude 4 and 5
  • 45,692 quakes between magnitude 3 and 4
  • 98,979 quakes between magnitude 2 and 3
  • 308,798 quakes below magnitude 2 that people normally don’t feel.

It has particularly been a banner year for large earthquakes.

Normally we see between 110 and 125 earthquakes of at least magnitude 5.0 during a 30 day period, but earlier this summer we witnessed 494 in just 30 days.

That is crazy.

The Pacific Ring of Fire has been more active than anywhere else, and it just got hit by another huge earthquake

A massive 7.8 magnitude earthquake struck Russia’s Kamchatka region at around 3 p.m. ET on Thursday, sparking concerns of a potential tsunami along the U.S. West Coast and Hawaii.

NOAA and the National Weather Service’s U.S. Tsunami Warning System has since confirmed that a Pacific-wide tsunami is not expected and that, “there is no tsunami threat to Hawaii.”

We should be very thankful that there was no tsunami.

Next time we might not be so fortunate.

Following the initial quake, there were more than 30 aftershocks of at least magnitude 4.5.

A few days earlier, on Monday, Alaska was rattled by a couple of very large quakes

A powerful earthquake struck off the coast of Alaska’s Aleutian Islands early Monday, stirring concerns of a potential tsunami among residents on the mainland.

The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) detected a 5.2-magnitude quake at 1am local time (5:02am ET) near the uninhabited community of Nikolski.

Less than two hours later, the USGS recorded a 4.8-magnitude aftershock in the same region.

Sadly, even though the entire west coast of the continental United States sits directly along the Pacific Ring of Fire, most of those that live there simply do not care about all of this seismic activity.

But mark my words, it is just a matter of time before “the Big One” strikes.

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