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Historic Earthquakes &
Earthquake Statistics
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Q:
Where do earthquakes occur? |
A:
Earthquakes can strike any
location at any time. But
history shows they occur in
the same general patterns
year after year, principally
in three large zones of the
earth. The world's greatest
earthquake belt, the
circum-Pacific seismic belt,
is found along the rim of
the Pacific Ocean, where
about 81 percent of the
world's largest earthquakes
occur. The belt extends from
Chile, northward along the
South American coast through
Central America, Mexico, the
West Coast of the United
States, and the southern
part of Alaska, through the
Aleutian Islands to Japan,
the Philippine Islands, New
Guinea, the island groups of
the Southwest Pacific, and
to New Zealand. This
earthquake belt was
responsible for 70,000
deaths in Peru in May 1970,
and 65 deaths and a billion
dollars' damage in
California in February 1971.
Why do so many earthquakes
originate in this belt? This
is a region of young,
growing mountains and deep
ocean trenches which
invariably parallel mountain
chains. Earthquakes
necessarily accompany
elevation changes in
mountains, the higher part
of the earth's crust, and
changes in the ocean
trenches, the lower part.
The second important belt,
the Alpide, extends from
Java to Sumatra through the
Himalayas, the
Mediterranean, and out into
the Atlantic. This belt
accounts for about 17
percent of the world's
largest earthquakes,
including some of the most
destructive, such as the
Iran shock that took 11,000
lives in August 1968, and
the Turkey tremors in March
1970 and May 1971 that each
killed over 1,000. All were
near magnitude 7 on the
Richter scale. The third
prominent belt follows the
submerged mid-Atlantic
Ridge.
The remaining shocks are
scattered in various areas
of the world. Earthquakes in
these prominent seismic
zones are taken for granted,
but damaging shocks occur
occasionally outside these
areas. Examples in the
United States are New
Madrid, Missouri, and
Charleston, South Carolina.
Many years, however, usually
elapse between such
destructive shocks.
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Q:
What is the biggest
earthquake ever? |
A:
Since 1900, the
earthquake in Chile
on May 22, 1960, is
the biggest in the
World with magnitude
9.5 Mw.
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Q:
I want to move to a
place that doesn't
have earthquakes.
Where can I go?
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A:
Antarctica has the
least earthquakes of
any continent, but
small earthquakes
can occur anywhere
in the World.
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Q:
How many earthquakes
worldwide occur each
day? Each year?
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A:
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Descriptor
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Magnitude
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Average Annually
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Great
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8 and higher
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1
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Major
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7 - 7.9
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18
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Strong
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6 - 6.9
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120
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Moderate
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5 - 5.9
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800
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Light
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4 - 4.9
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6,200
(estimated)
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Minor
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3 - 3.9
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49,000
(estimated)
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Very Minor
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< 3.0
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Magnitude 2 - 3:
about 1,000 per
day
Magnitude 1 - 2:
about 8,000 per
day
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