Small magnitude 3.2 earthquake 18 miles east of Homer, Alaska, United States
3.2 quake 12 Sep 10:11 pm (GMT -8)

A magnitude 3.2 earthquake near Homer, Kenai Peninsula, Alaska, USA, was reported only 12 minutes ago by the United States Geological Survey, considered the key international and national agency that monitors seismic activity in the US. The earthquake occurred at a moderately shallow depth of 27 miles beneath the epicenter late at night on Sunday, September 12th, 2021, at 10:11 pm local time. The exact magnitude, epicenter, and depth of the quake might be revised within the next few hours or minutes as seismologists review data and refine their calculations, or as other agencies issue their report.
A second report was later issued by the European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC), which listed it as a magnitude 3.2 earthquake as well.
According to preliminary calculations, we do not expect that the quake was felt by many people and did not cause any damage. In Halibut Cove (pop. 76, 8 miles away), Fritz Creek (pop. 1,900, 10 miles away), Homer (pop. 5,500, 18 miles away), Diamond Ridge (pop. 1,200, 18 miles away), and Anchor Point (pop. 1,900, 29 miles away), the quake was probably not felt.


Earthquake data:
Date & time: Sep 12, 2021 10:11 pm (GMT -8) local time (13 Sep 2021 06:11 GMT)
Magnitude: 3.2
Depth: 43.0 km
Epicenterlatitude / longitude: 59.67°N / 151.03°W (Kenai Peninsula, Alaska, United States)
Primary data source: USGS
https://www.volcanodiscovery.com/earthquake/news/141251/Small-magnitude-32-earthquake-18-miles-east-of-Homer-Alaska-United-States.html