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Q: The amount of shaking produced by an earthquake at a given location is called?
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The amount of shaking produced by an earthquake at a given location is called the?

The amount of shaking produced by an earthquake at a given location is called the intensity.


Explain the difference between magnitude and intensity of an earthquakes?

The magnitude of an earthquake is the amount of energy released at the source of the earthquake and is measured by a seismograph. Intensity is shaking strength of an earthquake at a particular location.


What is the name of the machine that rates the amount of shaking from an earthquake?

It is a seismomiter.


Is the depth of focus an important factor in determining the intensity of an earthquake?

Yes. The deeper the focus of an earthquake, the less intense the shaking is due to there being a larger amount of rock between the focus and the epicenter.


What does it mean when the seismic waves are in a 5.5 magnitude earthquake?

It means that a certain amount of shaking occurs near the earthquake; or equivalently, that a certain amount of energy is released. For more details on how this magnitude is defined, check the Wikipedia article on "Richter magnitude scale".


What factors determine an earthquale's intensity on the modifield Mercalli scale?

The amount of structural and geological damage done by an earthquake in a specific location determines an earthquake's intensity on the Mercalli scale.


What do you call it when an earthquake's violent shaking turns loose soft soil into liquid mud?

Earthquake shaking that turns solid water saturated soil to liquid mud is called "liquefaction".However no amount of earthquake shaking can turn loose dry soil or even loose damp soil to liquid mud, the soil must already be water saturated to undergo liquefaction. Solid water saturated soil is never loose, it is typically as hard as concrete!


Is the Richter scale better than the Mercalli scale?

The Richter scale measures the magnitude of an earthquake.Logarithmic scale is the other measurement which is what you use when talking about how much a measurement of an earthquake goes up by.There are also but here is just a few.


How much less energy does a magnitude 4 earthquake have than a magnitude 7?

Each increase by one magnitude corresponds to a release of energy 31.6 times that released by the lesser earthquake.Since 7 is 3 magnitudes higher than 4, the magnitude 4 earthquake has roughly 1/31554th the energy of the magnitude 7.Each increase by one magnitude corresponds to a release of shaking amplitude 10 times that released by the lesser earthquake.Since 7 is 3 magnitudes higher than 4, the magnitude 4 earthquake has 1/1000th the shaking amplitude of the magnitude 7.The amount of energy changes much more rapidly with magnitude than the amount of shaking amplitude. This is a commonly made error.


The amount of energey released by an earthquake?

That is the magnitude of the earthquake.


What scale do we use today to measure an earthquake and why?

A number of scales are used to measure earthquakes. These are broadly split into two main types. Magnitude scales and intensity scales. Magnitude scales give an indication of the amount of energy released during an earthquake and intensity scales give an indication of the sevirity of ground shaking and resultant damage in a given location. For more information on these, please see the related questions.


What is the maximum amount of slip on a fault during an earthquake?

what are the maxuim amount of slip on a fault during an earthquake