It is measured based on witness reports of the perceived violence of ground shaking, on the damage to buildings and other structures and based on ground accelerations as measured by seismometers.
Earthquake magnitude is measured using a number of differing scales including the Richter scale, the moment magnitude scale and the surface magnitude scale. Intensity is measured using he Modified Mercalli intensity scale.
The intensity of earthquakes is measured using the Modified Mercalli Intensity (MMI) scale, which assesses the effects of an earthquake at a given location. The energy released during an earthquake is measured using the moment magnitude scale (Mw), which takes into account the seismic moment and rupture length of the earthquake.
It measured 6.3 on the Richter scale
The intensity of an earthquake is measured using the Modified Mercalli Intensity (MMI) scale, which assesses the earthquake's effects on people, buildings, and the Earth's surface. This scale ranges from I (not felt) to XII (total destruction), based on observations and reports from individuals in different locations. In contrast, the magnitude of an earthquake, which quantifies its energy release, is typically measured using the Richter scale or the moment magnitude scale (Mw).
Earthquake intensity is measured using the Modified Mercalli Scale. That is basically a 'subjective' scale (as opposed to the Richter scale, which measures magnitude), because intensity is measured by the impact is is reported to have on people and their property, as reported by them. So a big earthquake like 8 on the Richter scale can have a low intensity if it happens in an area where few people live. A small earthquake can be high-intensity if it happens in a crowded area with many ramshackle houses.
Earthquake intensity is measured using the modified Mercalli scale or the macroseismic scale. Their values are derived based on eye witness accounts of the violence of the shaking of the ground, the damage done to buildings and other structures and based on ground surface accelerations measured by seismometers.
A seismograph records the intensity measured by the Ritcher Scale.
The intensity of an earthquake is measured using the moment magnitude scale, which takes into account the seismic moment released by an earthquake. This scale assigns a single number to quantify the size of an earthquake, with each whole number increase representing a tenfold increase in amplitude. The strongest earthquake on record had a magnitude of 9.5.
A earthquake occurs when two tectonic plates rub or collide and create sicmic activity below earth! It is measured on a Richter scale from 1-10... :)
Earthquakes are typically measured on the Richter scale or the moment magnitude scale, which quantify the energy released by an earthquake. The higher the number on either scale, the stronger the earthquake's intensity.
The maximum measured intensity of the 2010 Canterbury earthquake in New Zealand was IX (9) on the Modified Mercalli scale.
Earthquakes are measure with a seismograph which indicates the intensity of earth crust´s movements this measurement is call Richter 1 being less intensity and 10 being major intensity.