A powerful 7.3-magnitude earthquake struck off the coast of the Mexico-Guatemala border early Thursday, triggering urgent tsunami warnings for coastal communities across the region.
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) pinpointed the epicenter approximately 40 miles offshore in the Pacific Ocean at a depth of 10 kilometers. While the shallow depth initially amplified the intensity of the shaking, it also heightened the risk of displacement along the seafloor—a primary catalyst for tsunami waves.
Emergency sirens blared in Chiapas, Mexico, and across southwestern Guatemala as residents fled buildings. Reports from local civil protection agencies indicate widespread panic in coastal towns like Puerto Madero and Ocós, though damage assessments are still in the preliminary stages.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center (PTWC) issued a bulletin shortly after the tremor, advising coastal populations to move to higher ground. The advisory covers a 300-kilometer radius, warning that waves could reach heights of up to one meter above tide levels.
“We are tracking sea-level fluctuations closely,” said a spokesperson for the Guatemalan National Coordinator for Disaster Reduction (CONRED). “People need to stay away from the shoreline until we issue an all-clear.”
The region sits atop the intersection of the North American and Caribbean tectonic plates, making it one of the most seismically active zones in the Americas. Residents in the area are accustomed to tremors, but the sheer magnitude of this event has stretched local emergency response teams to their limits.
Communication lines in rural areas near the border are currently experiencing intermittent outages, complicating efforts to gather casualty figures. Hospitals in Tapachula have begun clearing triage areas, bracing for potential arrivals.
Power grids in parts of Chiapas have been severed as a precaution, leaving thousands in the dark during the initial search-and-rescue phase. With aftershocks already being recorded—some reaching magnitudes of 4.5—the immediate threat remains fluid.
For now, the focus is on the water. If the tsunami surge arrives, it will hit within the next two hours, testing the efficacy of the region’s coastal warning infrastructure.
