Mindanao Earthquake May Have Triggered Landslides, Liquefaction

8 reported3 unconfirmed

Initial analyses of the M=7.8 earthquake that struck offshore the south coast of Mindanao in the Philippines on 8 June 2026 suggest the potential for significant landslides and liquefaction. At the time of reporting, the full impacts remain unclear, with local press reporting 15 fatalities so far, though information from the most seriously impacted areas may be unavailable. The USGS Pager site estimates the area exposed to landslides is at the high end of the “significant” scale, with the population exposed in the 1,000 to 10,000 range. The highest landslide hazard area is remote and rural, so information may be delayed. The potential for liquefaction may be even more serious, with a broad swathe of high hazard. Past earthquakes in the region have generated large liquefaction-related landslides on low angle slopes with devastating effects. Additionally, the Philippines is entering typhoon season, and while Mindanao is south of the main typhoon zone, large storms can bring heavy rainfall, as seen with Typhoon Bopha in 2012.

What’s reported

The earthquake was M=7.8 and occurred offshore the south coast of Mindanao, Philippines on 8 June 2026.
Initial local press reports indicate 15 fatalities so far.
USGS Pager estimates the landslide hazard area is at the high end of the “significant” scale.
The population exposed to landslides is estimated between 1,000 and 10,000 people.
The highest landslide hazard area is remote and rural.
Liquefaction potential may be even more serious, with a broad high-hazard swathe.
Past earthquakes in the region have caused large liquefaction-related landslides on low angle slopes.
The Philippines is entering typhoon season; Mindanao is south of the main typhoon zone but can still experience heavy rainfall from large storms.

Open questions

The full extent of fatalities and damage, especially in the remote, high-hazard area.
Whether any large liquefaction-related landslides have occurred.
Whether a typhoon will bring heavy rainfall to the affected area.

Sources: eos.org

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