Monday, August 27, 2007

Earthquake Facts

  1. The largest recorded earthquake in the world was a magnitude 95 (Mw) in Chile on May 22, 1960
  2. Before electronics allowed recordings of large earthquakes, scientists built large spring-pendulum seismometers in an attempt to record the long-period motion produced by such quakes The largest one weighed about 15 tons. There is a medium-sized one three stories high in Mexico City that is still in operation.
  3. Before electronics allowed recordings of large earthquakes, scientists built large spring-pendulum seismometers in an attempt to record the long-period motion produced by such quakes The largest one weighed about 15 tons. There is a medium-sized one three stories high in Mexico City that is still in operation.
  4. The East African Rift System is a 50-60 km (31-37 miles) wide zone of active volcanics and faulting that extends north-south in eastern Africa for more than 3000 km (1864 miles) from Ethiopia in the north to Zambezi in the south It is a rare example of an active continental rift zone, where a continental plate is attempting to split into two plates which are moving away from one another.
  5. The first "pendulum seismoscope" to measure the shaking of the ground during an earthquake was developed in 1751, and it wasn't until 1855 that faults were recognized as the source of earthquakes
  6. Moonquakes ("earthquakes" on the moon) do occur, but they happen less frequently and have smaller magnitudes than earthquakes on the Earth It appears they are related to the tidal stresses associated with the varying distance between the Earth and Moon. They also occur at great depth, about halfway between the surface and the center of the moon.
  7. Although both are sea waves, a tsunami and a tidal wave are two different unrelated phenomenona A tidal wave is a shallow water wave caused by the gravitational interactions between the Sun, Moon, and Earth. A tsunami is a sea wave caused by an underwater earthquake or landslide (usually triggered by an earthquake) displacing the ocean water.
  8. The greatest mountain range is the Mid-Ocean Ridge, extending 64,374 km (40,000 mi) from the Arctic Ocean to the Atlantic Ocean, around Africa, Asia, and Australia, and under the Pacific Ocean to the west coast of North America It has a greatest height of 4207 m (13,800 ft) above the base ocean depth.
  9. The world's greatest land mountain range is the Himalaya-Karakoram It countains 96 of the world's 109 peaks of over 7317 m (24,000 ft). The longest range is the Andes of South America which is 7564 km (4700 mi) in length. Both were created bythe movement of tectonic plates.
  10. It is estimated that there are 500,000 detectable earthquakes in the world each year 100,000 of those can be felt, and 100 of them cause damage.
  11. It is thought that more damage was done by the resulting fire after the 1906 San Francisco earthquake than by the earthquake itself.

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