Such islands are not entirely unusual to scientists who study the earth and its sometimes violent movements.
Marco Bohnhoff, a professor of seismology at the German Center for Geosciences in Potsdam said there are two ways such islands can be created.
In the first scenario, the earth's crust violently lifts up out of the water. In the second, the earthquake triggers the movement and release of gases locked in the earth resulting in a flow called a "mud volcano".
Experts are still trying to determine what caused this island, but it could have been a mud volcano, Rafi said. Scientists will have to analyse the material to see what it's made of.
The island's appearance electrified people along the coast who flocked to the beach and took to boats to visit the island, despite warnings from officials who worried about gas emanating from the island.
The deputy commissioner of Gwadar district, Tufail Baloch, traveled by boat to the island Wednesday.
Water bubbled along the edges of the island, in what appeared to be gas discharging, Baloch said. He said the area smelled of gas that caused a flash when people lit cigarettes.
Dead fish floated on the water's surface, and local residents took stones from the land mass as souvenirs, he said.
Unlike lava volcanoes that harden when they come to the surface and cool, mud volcanoes generally don't create steep or hard rock structures, Bornhoff said, although they can last for long periods of time.
Such land masses have appeared before off Pakistan's Makran coast, said Muhammed Arshad, a hydrographer with the navy. After quakes in 1999 and 2010, new land masses rose up along a different part of the coast about 282 kilometres east of Gwadar, he said.
Each of those disappeared back into the sea within a year during the stormy monsoon season that sweeps Pakistan every summer, he said.
- AP