1993
DOI: 10.4095/184200
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The 1956 June 03 Arctic margin earthquake off Borden Island, Northwest Territories

Abstract: The earthquake of 3 June 1956 on the Arctic margin of Canada, north­west of Borden Island, has been briefly studied during a reappraisal of instru­mental data of some Canadian earthquakes. The revised parameters are: lat­itude 79.83°N±0.20°, longitude 116.99°W±l.0°, crustal depth (18±18 km), H = 05h 19m 26.6s U.T., and magnitude mb 5.7, Ms 5.4. The epicentre is unlikely to be more accurate than ±20 km. This is the second largest earthquake known from the Arctic margin of Canada.

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“…The three Arctic Ocean earthquakes also have primarily strike-slip mechanisms, and although two have low (D) quality rankings, all are very similar to each other, with one northeast-and one northweststriking plane. The solutions for these events are also similar to a poorly constrained mechanism for a larger (mb 5.7) earthquake that occurred in the same region in 1956 (Adams and Penney, 1993). The two that are closest together geographically (001003 and 001113b) have almost identical mechanisms.…”
Section: Western High Arcticmentioning
confidence: 50%
“…The three Arctic Ocean earthquakes also have primarily strike-slip mechanisms, and although two have low (D) quality rankings, all are very similar to each other, with one northeast-and one northweststriking plane. The solutions for these events are also similar to a poorly constrained mechanism for a larger (mb 5.7) earthquake that occurred in the same region in 1956 (Adams and Penney, 1993). The two that are closest together geographically (001003 and 001113b) have almost identical mechanisms.…”
Section: Western High Arcticmentioning
confidence: 50%