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What Is An Earthquake? What Causes It And How To Measure It Through Richter Scale?
What
Is
an
Earthquake?
Even
though
the
Earth
has
a
pretty
solid
surface,
the
interior
is
extremely
active.
There
are
four
basic
layers:
a
solid
crust,
a
hot,
nearly
solid
mantle,
a
liquid
outer
core
and
a
solid
inner
core.
When
there
is
an
intense
shaking
of
the
Earth's
surface,
there
are
caused
by
moments
in
the
Earth's
outermost
layer.

Why
Do
Earthquakes
Take
Place?
An
earthquake
occurs
when
two
blocks
of
the
earth
suddenly
slip
past
one
another
and
the
surface
where
the
slip
happens
is
called
the
fault
plane
or
fault.
The
tectonic
plates
are
always
moving
slowly
but
they
can
get
stuck
at
their
edges
owing
to
friction.
When
the
stress
on
the
edge
overcomes
the
friction,
then
there
is
an
earthquake
that
releases
energy
in
waves
that
travel
through
the
earth's
crust
and
cause
shaking
that
one
feels.
When an earthquake starts, the location below the earth's surface is known as the hypocenter and the location directly above it on the surface of the earth is called the epicentre. Also, at times an earthquake has foreshocks.
The largest, main earthquake is called the mainshock. Mainshocks always have aftershocks that follow, which are basically smaller earthquakes that occur later in the same place as the mainshocks. This can continue for days, weeks, months and even years depending on the size of the mainshock.
How
To
Measure
An
Earthquake
Through
Richter
Scale?
Richter
scale
is
the
first
and
widely
used
method
when
it
comes
to
measuring
an
earthquake
and
it
was
first
developed
by
Charles
F
Richter
in
1934.
It
is
basically
a
formula
that
was
developed
based
on
the
amplitude
of
the
largest
wave
recorded
on
a
specific
type
of
seismometer
and
the
distance
between
the
seismometer
and
the
earthquake.
According to the Oxford Dictionary, it is a numerical scale for expressing the magnitude of an earthquake on the basis of seismograph oscillations. The more destructive earthquakes typically have magnitudes between about 5.5 and 8.9; it is a logarithmic scale and a difference of one represents an approximate thirtyfold difference in magnitude.
Under the Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES), National Centre for Seismology (NCS) maintains a nationwide seismological network comprising 115 seismic stations to monitor earthquake activity pan India and around the nation. The whole country has been divided into four zones viz. zone V, IV, III and II according to the seismic zoning map of India prepared by the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) based on the historical seismicity and strong ground motions. Out of these zones, Zone V exhibits the highest seismic risk and zone II has the least, mentioned in Press Information Bureau.



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