A M8.6 shallow strike-slip earthquake occurred at 0838 UTC 11 April 2012 off the coast of northern Sumatra, Indonesia, and was followed by a second shallow M8.2 strike-slip aftershock at 1043 UTC (USGS). Both generated small local tsunamis with a maximum of 1.06 m measured at 1007 UTC in Meulaboh, Indonesia located about 395 km west southwest of the epicenter. Waves heights up to 0.4 m were recorded throughout the region and as far away as Rodrigues Island, Mauritius in the western Indian Ocean (0.22 m wave amplitude). Amateur video of the tsunami arriving in Indonesia was captured.
Since October 2011, Regional Tsunami Service Providers (RTSP) of Australia, India and Indonesia have been serving as the primary sources for tsunami advisories for the Indian Ocean, with the PTWC and Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) continuing to operate a parallel service until the end of 2012. The RTSP provide tsunami alerts directly to national tsunami warning centers in each country, and the countries use the advice to assess and issue warnings and advisories to their populations. The PTWC issued an Indian-Ocean wide Tsunami Watch at 0845 UTC, and JMA issued Tsunami Watch Information at 0855 UTC. PTWC cancelled its tsunami watch at 1318 UTC.
Public bulletins are available from the Australia, India, and Indonesia RTSPs, and from the PTWC.
This region of the Indo-Ausralian plate has been seismically very active throughout history, and includes the great M9.1 earthquake of 26 December 2004 that generated the deadliest tsunami ever killing nearly 230,000 in Indonesia and across the Indian Ocean. Immediately following the disaster, the IOC of UNESCO took the lead in coordinating activities and immediate action to establish an Indian Ocean Tsunami Warning and Mitigation System (IOTWS). The response included the start of an interim Advisory Service in 2005 through the PTWC in Hawaii and the JMA in Tokyo, and in 2011 the start of the permanent RTSPs for the Indian Ocean.