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There is no way of predicting an earthquake, but it is unlikely that a major earthquake will strike a location on any given day. The San Andreas Fault probably isn't capable of generating something as large as an 8.9.
It was the Kobe earthquake of 1995, also called Great Hanshin earthquake which was a large-scale earthquake in the Ōsaka-Kōbe (Hanshin) metropolitan area of western Japan that was among the strongest, deadliest, and costliest to ever strike that country.
Because Los Angles is very prone to earthquakes and is right on a Tectonic Plate.
It means that the earthquake is large and powerful.
No, the recent large earthquake of 9.0 was off the coast of Japan along with many hundreds of aftershocks since the initial very large earthquake.
If its a large earthquake, you can expect a tsunami to follow
A "large" earthquake can be a major or great earthquake, both of which can cause serious damage to people, animal life, and buildings.A major earthquake is one of magnitude 7 - 7.9 which can cause serious damage. A great earthquake has a magnitude 8.0 or greater which can completely destroy communities near the epicenter.The 9.1 magnitude earthquake that hit Japan on March 11, 2011, is an example of a very large or great earthquake.
They strike repeatedly injecting a large amount of venom.
yes
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the large earthquake
after shocks can be deadly - sometimes as bad as the earthquake itself!