Buildings can be placed on giant springs that can move slightly with the earth below them, they do not eliminate the danger of an earthquake, but they reduce it.
1) Magnitude 2) Duration 3) Distance from epicenter 4) Location (land vs. water) The effects of any earthquake depend on a number of widely varying factors. These factors are all of: * Intrinsic to the earthquake - its magnitude, type, location, or depth; * Geologic conditions where effects are felt - distance from the event, path of the seismic waves, types of soil, water saturation of soil; and * Societal conditions reacting to the earthquake - quality of construction,preparedness of populace, or time of day preparedness
it effects them because it destroyed all there houses and building giving them no water or food for them to survive
the effects of the earthquake is watching pornography
Earthquakes can destroy people's house.It might cost people a lot of money to build a new house. It can cause cracks on the ground from buildings collapsing on the ground.Which can cause a lot of car accidents.
No. The scale you are describing is an intensity scale such as the modified Mercalli scale. The Richter scale is in fact a magnitude scale which describes the amount of energy released by an earthquake.
No. The scale you are describing is an intensity scale such as the modified Mercalli scale. The Richter scale is in fact a magnitude scale which describes the amount of energy released by an earthquake.
Anand S. Arya has written: 'Protection of educational buildings against earthquakes' -- subject(s): Earthquake effects, School buildings 'Earthquake disaster reduction' -- subject(s): Brick Building, Buildings, Earthquake damage, Earthquake effects, Prevention
The effects of an earthquake on people and buildings.
Hiroshi Akiyama has written: 'Earthquake-resistant limit-state design for buildings' -- subject(s): Buildings, Earthquake effects, Earthquake resistant design
it depends on what building and what level earthquake
Henry J Degenkolb has written: 'Earthquake forces on tall structures' -- subject(s): Buildings, Earthquake effects
location distance motion
The effects were... ~ Lots of people lost their lives ~ Many families were destroyed ~ Many houses and buildings were destroyed ~ A lot of money loss
Primary effects are things that happen straight away as soon as the earthquake hits, such as; buildings shake/collapse (depending on how strong the earthquake is) roads crack/fall in, gas and water systems/poles break/burst
John W. Wallace has written: 'The 1985 Chile earthquake' -- subject(s): Earthquake effects, Earthquake engineering, Reinforced concrete Buildings, Reinforced concrete construction, Standards
Buildings can be placed on giant springs that can move slightly with the earth below them, they do not eliminate the danger of an earthquake, but they reduce it.