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History of Earthquakes in Morocco

From 1624 to today, four centuries of earthquakes that shaped the Kingdom's history

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Morocco, located at the junction of the African and Eurasian tectonic plates, has experienced numerous destructive earthquakes over the centuries. This particular geographical position has led to the formation of the Rif and Atlas ranges, while exposing the country to regular seismic activity. Understanding this history allows better preparation for future events.

Major Earthquakes of 20th and 21st Centuries

2023
Al Haouz
M 6.8

The deadliest in 120 years

On the night of September 8, 2023, a devastating earthquake struck the Al Haouz province, 70 km southwest of Marrakech. The epicenter was in the High Atlas, at only 19 km depth.

2,946
Deaths
5,674
Injured
59,674
Destroyed buildings
300,000
Homeless
Heritage and lessons

This earthquake led to the creation of the High Atlas Development Agency and a 120 billion DH reconstruction program over 5 years. It also revealed the importance of preserving traditional earthquake-resistant construction techniques.

2004
Al Hoceima
M 6.3

The Rif catastrophe

On February 24, 2004, a violent earthquake shook the Al Hoceima region in the Rif. The active subduction zone north of Morocco caused this event which resulted in massive destruction in mountain villages.

628
Deaths
926
Injured
2,539
Destroyed houses
15,000
Homeless
Heritage and lessons

This earthquake led to a revision of Moroccan seismic regulations (RPS 2000 then RPS 2011) and better mapping of risk zones in the Rif.

1960
Agadir
M 5.7

The tragedy that changed Morocco

On February 29, 1960, at 11:40 PM, a magnitude 5.7 earthquake struck Agadir. Despite a 'moderate' magnitude, the shallow depth (15 km) and vulnerability of constructions caused unprecedented destruction. One-third of the city's population perished.

12,000+
Estimated deaths
15,000
Injured
75%
City destroyed
35,000
Homeless
Heritage and lessons

The Agadir earthquake marked a turning point in modern Moroccan history. The city was entirely rebuilt according to seismic standards. From this tragedy, the first anti-seismic construction regulations in Morocco were developed.

Historical Earthquakes (before 20th century)

1926

Fez Earthquake

Estimated magnitude 6.0. This earthquake caused significant damage in the Fez medina, one of Morocco's oldest imperial cities.

1731

Agadir Earthquake

A first major earthquake struck Agadir, foreshadowing the 1960 catastrophe. Historical sources mention significant damage.

1624

Fez Earthquake

One of the oldest documented earthquakes in Morocco. The Fez medina suffered significant destruction requiring reconstruction work.

Major Earthquakes Comparison Table

DateLocationMagnitudeCasualtiesDepthImpact
Sept. 8, 2023Al Haouz6.82,94619 kmStrongest in 120 years
Feb. 10, 2025Ksar El Kébir5.2020 kmFelt up to Casablanca
Feb. 24, 2004Al Hoceima6.362812 kmMassive Rif destruction
Feb. 29, 1960Agadir5.712,000+15 km1/3 population decimated
Dec. 18, 1926Fez6.0~50UnknownMedina damage

Lessons from History

Construction standards

Each major earthquake led to improvements in seismic regulations, from RPS 2000 to RPS 2011.

Traditional heritage

Ancestral well-laid stone construction techniques often offer better resistance than poorly executed modern constructions.

Critical depth

Shallow earthquakes (< 20 km) cause more damage than deep ones, even at equivalent magnitude.

National solidarity

Morocco's mobilization after each catastrophe demonstrates remarkable collective resilience.

Sources: EMSC, Morocco ING, National Archives, SGEB