A magnitude 5.5 earthquake has struck in the northwest of Australia, Geoscience Australia said.
The quake occurred in the Timor Sea at 6.47 a.m. AEDT on Saturday, about 300 kilometres north-northwest of the Dampier Peninsula in Western Australia at a depth of 20 kilometres.
No tsunami warning has been issued.
Geoscience Australia’s Senior Seismologist Phil Cummins told The Epoch Times on Saturday that the northwest shelf of Australia is an area of relatively heightened seismicity relative to the rest of the country.
In Australia, earthquakes measuring a magnitude 3 and above occur about “half a dozen” times a year, while earthquakes measuring 4 and above happen about twice a year, and those above 5 happen every couple of years, Cummins said.
The biggest earthquake recorded in Australia was a magnitude 6.6 that occurred west of Broome in July 2019. “There were certainly aftershocks in that earthquake,” Cummins said.
He added that Saturday’s quake could potentially be an aftereffect. “It’s not that surprising even after a couple of years, to have aftershocks occur,” he said.
“Those are relatively small earthquakes,” Cummins said, adding that they’re not particularly unusual.
Like the northwest shelf, the southeast part of Australia is also an area of relatively heightened seismicity for the country, he said.
They encouraged anyone who felt the earthquake to report it on their site.