The occurrence of large to major earthquakes in Stable Continental Regions (SCR) is a rare phenomenon, generally associated with very long recurrence periods. The deadly seismic event (M-6.3) of 30th September 1993 in Latur district, Maharashtra, and the Jabalpur earthquake of 1999 (M 6.1), central India, challenge the earlier assumptions of the aseismic nature of the Deccan shield of India. Lack of historic seismic records for this region and the recent debate about the reactivation of a pre-existing fault in the basement beneath Deccan traps as the causative source for the 1993 Latur earthquake, led us to investigate the paleoseismicity of Latur, Osmanabad region. We present geological evidences, obtained from three sites, 60 km apart, of...