March 1875 Mexico Erathquake

Status: INSIDE TSW

TSW Window: 1875-03-03T20:19:40Z to 1875-03-11T20:19:40Z

Syzygy Time: 1875-03-07T20:19:40Z

Perigee Time: 1875-03-10T06:00:00Z

Sublunar Latitude: -7.6427304106°

Sublunar Longitude: -121.2463372837°

TSB Lower Latitude: -22.6427°

TSB Upper Latitude: 7.3573°

Radial Stress

Syzygy: 7.5666118193 kPa

Perigee: 7.744150099 kPa

Coulomb Stress

Syzygy: 4.5399670916 kPa

Perigee: 4.6464900594 kPa

Target Faults

Tonga-Kermadec / Peru-Chile Trench / Australia, Indonesian Arc / Papua New Guinea, Philippine Plate / Mexico / Caribbean/ Red Sea Rift

Alignments

Perigee In Tsw: Yes

Perihelion In Tsw: No

Mars In Tsw: No

Venus In Tsw: Yes

Super Tsw: Yes

Countries in High Seismic Zone

  • Indonesia
  • Fiji
  • Mexico
  • Solomon Islands
  • Tiwan
  • Australia
  • Brazil
  • Papua New Guinea
  • Thailand
  • Vietnam
  • Peru
  • South Africa
  • Vanuatu
  • Philippines
  • Tonga
  • Chile
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Ecuador
  • Sudan

The March 1875 Mexican Earthquake event is a classic illustration of the “Seismic Storm” that can occur when the Earth moves into a Super TSW.

According to the given data, this window reached a peak Radial Stress of 7.74 kPa and a Coulomb Stress of 4.64 kPa, which aligns perfectly with the devastating sequence that began in February 1875 and reached a secondary crisis in March.

Our formula-based data specifically highlights the Philippine Plate, Mexico, and the Caribbean.

  • Mexico (TMVB): The 1875 event occurred in the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt (TMVB), a region of “crustal” earthquakes that are relatively shallow. The Coulomb Stress of 4.64 kPa is particularly dangerous for these shallow faults because they lack the deep-seated “damping” effect of subduction megathrusts.
  • The 1875 event proves that even without the “Solar boost” of Perihelion, a 7.74 kPa Radial Stress window can essentially erase towns from the map.