A 4.9-magnitude earthquake jolted Balochistan's coastal city of Gwadar on Saturday, however, no damage or injuries were reported.
The National Seismic Monitoring Centre of the Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) said the epicentre of the earthquake was 40 kilometres away from southwest Pasni.
Its depth was 14 kilometres, it added.
Earlier this month, Karachi experienced unusual seismic activity since June 1, with 36 minor earthquakes recorded due to the activation of the Landhi fault line, according to the weather department.
The most recent tremor, with a magnitude of 2.6 and a depth of 10 kilometres, struck two days ago at 1:45am, with its epicentre located 8km southeast of Malir.
Just a day before these quakes, Peshawar, the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, was also rattled by a mild magnitude 4.7 earthquake.
The seismological centre reported that the tremors originated from Afghanistan's Hindu Kush mountain range, with a depth of 211km.
These recent events follow a series of earlier quakes that have affected various parts of Pakistan.
Earthquakes are a common occurrence in Pakistan, a country situated on the active boundary of the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates.
The Indian plate's continuous northward push into the Eurasian plate makes large parts of South Asia seismically active.
PTI’s candidates include Murad Saeed, Faisal Javed, Mirza Afridi, Noor-ul-Haq Qadri, Azam Swati, and Rubina Naz
Pakistan and EU reiterated resolve to continue close engagement under the GSP+ framework, says foreign ministry
DPM Ishaq Dar says UAP Railway Corridor will connect Central Asian countries to Pakistani seaports via Afghanistan
PM Shehbaz briefed on rain emergency at NEOC, says damages lower this year due to pre-emptive measures
PM Mohammed Shia al-Sudani orders immediate investigation to "uncover any shortcomings"
Dr Afaaq Ahmed expresses satisfaction in the steps taken by authorities so far, says Kuts