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On Tuesday, March 3rd, 2026, at 04:56 UTC, a magnitude 6.1 earthquake struck off the west coast of northern Sumatra at a shallow depth of just 10 kilometres — the kind of depth that turns moderate magnitude into violent shaking at the surface. The epicentre sat offshore near Simeulue Island, directly inside the Sunda-Java subduction zone where the Indo-Australian plate grinds beneath the Sunda plate at up to 63 mm per year. No tsunami alert was issued. No casualties were reported. Officials called it a short jolt with no serious damage. But in the coastal town of Sinabang, a 50-year-old resident named Ahmadi described what it actually felt like on the ground: strong enough to send him running from his house in panic, strong enough to put families into the streets, strong enough that windows rattled, walls creaked, and glassware broke across Simeulue Island. The shaking was felt as far as Medan, the capital of North Sumatra — hundreds of kilometres from the epicentre. BMKG confirmed the tremor was strongly felt across Aceh province, the same province where a magnitude 9.1 earthquake triggered a tsunami on December 26th, 2004 that killed more than 170,000 people in Indonesia alone and over 230,000 across the Indian Ocean. That rupture tore 1,500 kilometres of the Sunda megathrust and displaced the seafloor by over 20 metres. This is the same fault system. The same subduction zone. The same section of crust. Aceh recorded 1,556 earthquakes in 2025 — a 39% increase over the previous year — including two at magnitude 6.3, both at shallow depths. The USGS ranks Indonesia as the most seismically active country on Earth. On average, it produces a magnitude 7 earthquake every year and a magnitude 8+ every five to seven years. A magnitude 9 event is estimated to occur roughly every century somewhere in the archipelago. The last one was 22 years ago. Tuesday's 6.1 caused no deaths. No buildings collapsed. Families returned indoors within minutes. But the ground beneath Aceh has not stopped moving since 2004 — and the megathrust that produced the deadliest tsunami in recorded history is still accumulating strain at the same rate it always has. The question in Aceh is never whether the next big one is coming. The question is whether anyone will have more than a few minutes to react when it does. For business inquiries, copyright concerns, or other questions, please reach out to us at: vaha7212@gmail.com Copyright Disclaimer: - Under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for FAIR USE for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statutes that might otherwise be infringing. Non-Profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of FAIR USE. This video may include copyrighted material that has not been explicitly authorized by the copyright owner(s). However, we believe that our use qualifies as fair use under applicable copyright laws. If you are the rights holder and believe otherwise, please contact us, and we will take the necessary steps to resolve the issue. #sumatraearthquake #indonesiaearthquake #aceh #simeulue #earthquake2026 #ringoffire #sundamegathrust #tsunamiwarning #bmkg #naturaldisaster #breakingnews #earthquaketoday #indonesia #seismicactivity #acehprovince