cause it just did.....
the arrival of surface waves liquefaction a tsunami an aftershock
Christchurch was a very beautiful place until the earthquake happened, and nature stuck a course. The Liquefaction side of it is a liquid that comes from the ground and the easiest way of saying it; it pops up and says hello. Christchurch had so much damage from the quake people found everything destroyed, but also finding out that liquefaction will destroy it even more. must have been heart braking. Young kids were scared from the most hit places round Christchurch, is a good website to learn more on liquefaction :)
Liquefaction causes soil to lose it's ability to support loads (technically described as a loss of bearing capacity) which can cause subsidence of building foundations. It can also cause differential subsidence where one part of the ground subsided more than another. When this occurs (especially under buildings) it can cause even more structural damage than uniformly distributed subsidence and also lead to the fracture of underground services such as water and gas mains. This in turn can lead to a greatly increased risk of fire and explosion and also can hamper the efforts to fight fire due to the damage to water mains. For more information on liquefaction, please see the related question/
Earthquakes cause direct damage when the seismic disturbance weakens and collapses buildings and other infrastructures not built to withstand the tremors. This often causes great loss of life. Other damage caused by earthquakes results from landslides, mudslides, avalanches, fires, soil liquefaction and tsunamis.
cause it just did.....
boom panes
It is Tsunamis, Aftershocks, Liquefaction, and Shaking.
liquefaction can cause builings to sink since it makes Earth's surface act like a liquid. It can harm people and other stuff too
the arrival of surface waves liquefaction a tsunami an aftershock
It can be cause by liquefaction.
Christchurch was a very beautiful place until the earthquake happened, and nature stuck a course. The Liquefaction side of it is a liquid that comes from the ground and the easiest way of saying it; it pops up and says hello. Christchurch had so much damage from the quake people found everything destroyed, but also finding out that liquefaction will destroy it even more. must have been heart braking. Young kids were scared from the most hit places round Christchurch, is a good website to learn more on liquefaction :)
I have not one clue...
Liquefaction causes soil to lose it's ability to support loads (technically described as a loss of bearing capacity) which can cause subsidence of building foundations. It can also cause differential subsidence where one part of the ground subsided more than another. When this occurs (especially under buildings) it can cause even more structural damage than uniformly distributed subsidence and also lead to the fracture of underground services such as water and gas mains. This in turn can lead to a greatly increased risk of fire and explosion and also can hamper the efforts to fight fire due to the damage to water mains. For more information on liquefaction, please see the related question/
To combat damage caused by liquefaction, new homes built on soft ground should be anchored to solid rock below the soil.
Earthquakes cause direct damage when the seismic disturbance weakens and collapses buildings and other infrastructures not built to withstand the tremors. This often causes great loss of life. Other damage caused by earthquakes results from landslides, mudslides, avalanches, fires, soil liquefaction and tsunamis.
Earthquakes cause direct damage when the seismic disturbance weakens and collapses buildings and other infrastructures not built to withstand the tremors. This often causes great loss of life. Other damage caused by earthquakes results from landslides, mudslides, avalanches, fires, soil liquefaction and tsunamis.