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The magnitude is a
number that characterizes the relative size of an
earthquake. Magnitude is based on measurement of the maximum
motion recorded by a seismograph. Several scales have been
defined, but the most commonly used are (1) local magnitude
(ML), commonly referred to as "Richter magnitude," (2)
surface-wave magnitude (Ms), (3) body-wave magnitude (Mb),
and (4) moment magnitude (Mw). Scales 1-3 have limited range
and applicability and do not satisfactorily measure the size
of the largest earthquakes. The moment magnitude (Mw) scale,
based on the concept of seismic moment, is uniformly
applicable to all sizes of earthquakes but is more difficult
to compute than the other types. All magnitude scales should
yield approximately the same value for any given earthquake.

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