The M w 7.0 Samos earthquake 11:51 GMT) struck the eastern Aegean Sea in the area between the Samos Island and the western Turkish coasts. The epicenter of the main shock lies about 10 km offshore of the north coast of Samos Island (37.9020°N-26.7942°E; Bogazici University, Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute's Regional Earthquake-Tsunami Monitoring Center-BDTIM), and at a focal depth of 10-12 km, according to the majority of the published point source mechanism solutions (Table S1). The earthquake was felt over a large area across both Greece and Turkey at distances exceeding 250 km. In Samos, the main shock caused two fatalities and structural damage in hundreds of buildings and infrastructures. In western Turkey, however, about 65 km to the NNE of the epicenter, the city of Izmir suffered much more damage. At least 20 buildings collapsed and hundreds were heavily damaged, while 116 people lost their lives and 1,035 more were reported injured, making this earthquake the deadliest to hit Turkey in nearly a decade. In Samos, the seismic shaking triggered secondary effects including coseismic coastal uplift, liquefaction phenomena, and various types of ground failures, while a tsunami that struck the surrounding coastal regions and flooded the port of Samos was generated.Moment tensor solutions computed by various institutes employing either teleseismic methods or utilizing regional data, as well as InSAR and GPS ground deformation maps (