a techtonic plate under the earth moved. you cant really see any physical changes but yes the earth changed
The surface of the Earth can be changed by resulting from outer space, like from a meteor strike.
The surface of the Earth can be changed by resulting from outer space, like from a meteor strike.
After an earthquake, the Earth's surface can be altered due to various geological processes like ground shaking, landslides, surface ruptures, and liquefaction. This can result in changes to the topography, formation of new faults, and displacement of rock layers. The extent of these changes depends on the magnitude and location of the earthquake.
The result is commonly known as an earthquake.
The sudden movement could result in an earthquake.
During an earthquake, the earth's surface shakes and can sometimes crack or move along fault lines. This movement releases energy stored in the Earth's crust, causing vibrations that we feel as shaking. Strong earthquakes can result in landslides, surface ruptures, and changes in the landscape.
earthquakes makes changes in maps as an earthquakes only when the electronic plates under earths crust come and collide with each other and they result into the change in the shape and position of the continents or the land area on its crust which changes the shapes and thus this is who the maps keep changing
a spring
Earths tilt
The immediate result of a sudden slippage of rocks within Earth's crust is an earthquake. This movement along faults causes seismic waves to propagate through the Earth, leading to shaking of the ground surface.
You cannot forecast an earthquake, you can however predict the eruption of a volcanic eruption, an earthquake is unpredictable, as it is the result in a sudden release of pressure in the earths crust, if you could predict them there would be no deaths resulting from them.
Aftershocks are smaller earthquakes that occur after a larger earthquake in the same area. They are a result of the earths crust near the fault rupture readjusting as a result of the main earthquake (also known as the "main shock").