It depends how far the crack goes. But your choices are only rock and a rush of molten lava flowing up to fill the gap.
The 2004 tsunami after the 9.2 earthquake in Sumatra killed an estimated 240,000. The Japan tsunami, 9.0, in 2011, killed an estimated 16,000. Some tsunamis can be generated by landslides, as an extremely huge piece of ice fell off a glacier in Alaska one (not in the 1964 earthquake), and caused a huge tidal wave over 100 feet high. Though most large tsunamis are generated by earthquakes on the seafloor, especially on the Ring of Fire.
it did when a cow fell into the crack its true!
The secondary wave of the earthquake cause little damage, only a few buildings fell.
There have been very few, and all are tremors, I have lived there for years and only once felt a small tremor, It was just enough to wake me up, nothing fell of shelves or anything, So in this conclusion, There would be no earthquakes in darwin
Japan's most severe earthquake was on Friday 11th March 2011 which was an 8.9 magnitude, this happened because there are two plates which can push together right under Japan, but it was not just an earthquake, after the earthquake there was a tsunami which was 10m high.
i think an earthquake is more powerful because the ground could crack everything shakes and breaks and if someone fell ain't no telling where they would end up...#who knows?
The answer to this question has little to do with the cracked ceiling but what caused the ceiling to crack in the first place. If it is caused by settling of the home or earth movement then the ceiling crack would not be covered. If a tree limb fell due to a windstorm and damaged the ceiling then it would be covered under a homeowners policy.
Because when Oscar Lopez was born he fell from the doctors hands and when he fell the earthquake began
The earth opened up, and I fell into the fissure. The fishery will be closed henceforth, due to the fissure created by the earthquake.
a old lady fell in water thats what caussed the earthquake
it created a big crack.
They would pay for it only if it has been added to the policy (or if it was part of the home when insured) AND only if the damage was caused by some unforseen circumstance. IT probably would not be covered for a structural failure, an earthquake, etc. But if a bulldozer fell into it , that may be covered.
Plate tectonics. Since Japan is located between two plates, one plate subducted into the other, causing the earth's crusty nose to move, therefore causing the earthquake along with the tsunami. An old lady fell over in Canada! causing the earthquake! :3
no he fell in the crack
the sort of damage that took place was that buildings fell down and roads were twisted , bridges fell down. this was all because they weren't earthquake proof.
"Key" because it performed the action ("fell") of the sentence.
The 2004 tsunami after the 9.2 earthquake in Sumatra killed an estimated 240,000. The Japan tsunami, 9.0, in 2011, killed an estimated 16,000. Some tsunamis can be generated by landslides, as an extremely huge piece of ice fell off a glacier in Alaska one (not in the 1964 earthquake), and caused a huge tidal wave over 100 feet high. Though most large tsunamis are generated by earthquakes on the seafloor, especially on the Ring of Fire.