yes
the answer is yes,it can.
Pikachu does not learn Rock Slide from level. I think that you have to teach it Rock Slide.
A plate is an underground disc made out of rock occasionally they slide and collide when this happens underground it creates earthquakes when they collide under water there are sunamies there is a spot in iceland where you can go and see them any help:)?
Tsunami are created by a massive amount of underwater rock, from the wall of any land mass that rises up from the bottom of the ocean or sea, breaking free and falling to the bottom of the body of water. An underwater land slide. The rock in motion pushes the water below it and draws the water above it to back fill its downward slide. These huge pressure fronts, high in front of it and low behind it, create an anomaly that the body of water will equalize, but the tidal forces in the body of water will propagate outward from this phenomenon. The size of the tidal force created depends on the incline, height, and volume of rock involved in this under water land slide. This forms huge waves that propagate away from the slide. The waves don't appear very high on the surface until they approach the incline of a beach. When they reach the incline, the massive amount of water in this propagated wave washes up onto the gradual incline of a shoreline as a devastating volume of water, varying in depth by the strength of the tsunami, which is determined by the size of the underwater land slide at the origin.
Throwing a rock in a pond won't cause a 500 ft wave to destroy half the city!
Use TM80 (Rock Slide) on it.
A rock at the surface will cool faster than a rock underground.
Rock Slide is not a TM in Leafgreen. In Leafgreen Rock Slide is a Move Tutor move and the Move Tutor is hidden somewhere in Rock Tunnel.
Little Rock, Arkansas is 750 miles inland - well out of the reach of the most powerful Tsunami.
It is tsunami strike
Slide Rock State Park was created in 1985.
Erosion can weaken the bedrock or soil supporting the land surface, leading to sinkholes or landslides. In the case of sinkholes, erosion can dissolve underground rock formations, creating empty spaces that eventually collapse. With landslides, erosion can remove material at the base of a slope, causing the overlying soil or rock to lose support and slide downhill.