An earthquake (also known
as a quake, tremor or
temblor) is the result of a
sudden release of energy in
the Earth's crust that creates
seismic waves . The
seismicity, seismism or
seismic activity of an area
refers to the frequency, type
and size of earthquakes
experienced over a period of
time.
Earthquakes are measured
using observations from
seismometers. The moment
magnitude is the most
common scale on which
earthquakes larger than
approximately 5 are reported
for the entire globe. The
more numerous earthquakes
smaller than magnitude 5
reported by national
seismological observatories
are measured mostly on the
local magnitude scale, also
referred to as the Richter
scale. These two scales are
numerically similar over their
range of validity. Magnitude 3
or lower earthquakes are
mostly almost imperceptible
or weak and magnitude 7 and
over potentially cause serious
damage over larger areas,
depending on their depth.
The largest earthquakes in
historic times have been of
magnitude slightly over 9,
although there is no limit to
the possible magnitude. The
most recent large earthquake
of magnitude 9.0 or larger
was a 9.0 magnitude
earthquake in Japan in 2011
(as of October 2012), and it
was the largest Japanese
earthquake since records
began. Intensity of shaking is
measured on the modified
Mercalli scale . The shallower
an earthquake, the more
damage to structures it
causes, all else being equal.
At the Earth's surface,
earthquakes manifest
themselves by shaking and
sometimes displacement of
the ground. When the
epicenter of a large
earthquake is located
offshore, the seabed may be
displaced sufficiently to cause
a tsunami. Earthquakes can
also trigger landslides, and
occasionally volcanic activity.
In its most general sense, the
word earthquake is used to
describe any seismic event —
whether natural or caused by
humans — that generates
seismic waves. Earthquakes
are caused mostly by rupture
of geological faults , but also
by other events such as
volcanic activity, landslides,
mine blasts, and nuclear
tests. An earthquake's point
of initial rupture is called its
focus or hypocenter . The
epicenter is the point at
ground level directly above
the hypocenter.
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