} || ?|| 8.8–9.4 Mw, 9.4 MS
Further information: 1420 Caldera Earthquake (Biobío Region)
Further information: 1570 Concepción Earthquake Further information: 1575 Valdivia Earthquake Further information: 1604 Arica Earthquake || ?|| 3 injured|| Small - Moderate tsunami.
Further information: 1615 Arica Earthquake 8.0 MS Destructive tsunami 8.7 MS Destructive tsunami. Moderate tsunami Destructive tsunami. Devastating damage in Concepción. Known as the "Charles Darwin Earthquake", because the naturalist was visiting the area, observing the earthquake effects in Valdivia and the subsequent tsunami in Concepción-Talcahuano. Moderate tsunami. (now Arica y Parinacota Region, Chile) Destructive tsunami. Destructive tsunami Moderate tsunami Moderate tsunami Tsunami 8.3 MS Deadliest earthquake in Chile's history. 49 injured Minor tsunami. 35 injured 35 injured A sequence of 3 earthquakes with epicenters near Las Melosas locality, which violently struck the mountain area of Cajón del Maipo, including towns like El Volcán, Queltehues, San Gabriel and San José de Maipo A series of strong earthquakes in Biobío and Aracucanía. They formed part of the foreshock sequence for the 1960 Valdivia earthquake. Strongest earthquake in recorded history. Destructive tsunami in Chile, Hawai'i, Japan . c. 300 injured 40 injured Minor tsunami. 7.7 MS 6.5 Mb 13 injured 2,483–2,575 injured 44–112 injured 58 injured 300+ injured 200 injured 65 injured 24 missing, ~12,000 injured Destructive tsunami. Largest and most important quake in the country since the 1960 Valdivia Earthquake. 209 injured 34 injured, 6 missing Minor damage in Huasco, Carrizal Bajo and Vallenar. Some landslides in different points of Atacama Region. 9 injured ==See also==