The 1964 Alaska Earthquake was the most powerful in US history, causing mayhem as far away as California and Hawaii.

On March 27, 1964, at 5:36 p.m. local time, the ground below southern Alaska ruptured with unprecedented force. Measuring 9.2 on the moment magnitude scale, the Great Alaska Earthquake was the most powerful earthquake ever recorded in the United States, and the second strongest globally. Its violent tremors lasted over four minutes, leaving a trail of destruction that reshaped Alaska’s landscape and changed American earthquake preparedness forever.

A Cataclysmic Tectonic Shift

The quake struck the Prince William Sound region, about 75 miles east of Anchorage. It was caused by the sudden release of stress between the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate, a subduction zone where one tectonic plate dives beneath another. This massive geological event ruptured along an area nearly 600 miles long and 120 miles wide, producing uplift in some regions and subsidence in others.

NOAA Central Library, Wikimedia Commons

The Toll On Anchorage And Beyond

Anchorage, Alaska’s most populous city, suffered widespread devastation. Entire neighborhoods cracked open, roads buckled, and buildings crumbled. The Turnagain Heights subdivision saw dozens of homes destroyed as the ground beneath them liquefied and slid. Downtown Anchorage saw multi-story buildings collapse or become uninhabitable, while schools, hospitals, and public services were paralyzed.

Violent Landslides And Ground Failures

Across south-central Alaska, landslides and ground fissures were rampant. Port towns like Seward and Valdez were especially hard-hit. In Valdez the waterfront fell into the sea, killing 32 people as the harbor vanished under a wave of shifting earth. Whittier, Kodiak, and Chenega also experienced major landslides that buried structures and cut off access to vital transportation routes.

Tsunamis Wreak Havoc Along The Coast

The earthquake triggered a series of devastating tsunamis. Some of these waves were generated by the undersea tectonic movement, while others were caused by landslides into bodies of water. The largest wave recorded reached 220 feet in Shoup Bay near Valdez. Entire villages such as Chenega were wiped out. Of the 131 total deaths from the earthquake, 113 were caused by tsunamis, many of them far from the quake’s epicenter.

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Wikimedia Commons

Destruction Far Beyond Alaska

Tsunamis generated by the quake traveled thousands of miles across the Pacific. They struck the west coast of the continental United States, Canada, Hawaii, and even reached Japan. Crescent City, California, suffered 12 deaths when a 21-foot wave struck its downtown area hours after the quake. Coastal communities in Oregon and Washington also reported major damage to docks, boats, and infrastructure.

Immediate Emergency Response

In the aftermath, communication was severely disrupted, and harsh weather further complicated rescue efforts. However, local communities and federal agencies worked swiftly to establish emergency shelters and restore vital services. The U.S. military played a major role in recovery efforts, using aircraft and naval ships to access remote and cut-off communities…

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