they use a radar and they use it to find earthquakes.
might not be right but sorry tried
Its when a minor earthquake is shaking next to a fault. and finally the big one happens
they are like little earthquakes after a big earthquake
the biggest earthquake recorded was 9.1 on the Richter scale.
Yes, earthquakes can have foreshocks, which are smaller earthquakes that occur before the main event. These foreshocks can help seismologists to predict the likelihood and intensity of an upcoming larger earthquake.
A thermal radiation permeating the Universe almost uniformly, which is not associated with any massive objects near it. It is referred to as Cosmic background radiation.
Nobody knows, we can't predict earthquakes.
Now, scientists can only predict the location and what it could do. They can't predict exactly when, example would be, they only know an earthquake will hit Japan between now and 10 years. They also can't predict how big/destructive it will be. (Not very helpful, predicting earthquakes...)
It seems it will continue expanding forever.
A machine that able them to read the levels of ground movements. This machine makes a drawing in zigzag Like a heart beat reader. When the lines are high there is going to be a big earthquake. low zigzag having stationary lined means not much earthquakes. Hope this helps!
So if there is an earthquake they can monitor; the cause, how big it was etc.
Its when a minor earthquake is shaking next to a fault. and finally the big one happens
California sits an a variety of fault lines and it is only a matter of when, not if, a big earthquake will occur. Scientists say it's a certainty. They just don't know the exact time it will happen.
No. While there is a chance of "The Big One" striking in the next 30 years the amount of movement along the fault will not be more than a few meters.
It is impossible to predict the future. We won't know the latest trends until they begin to happen.
That is a BIG question and it is a brave IT consultant or computer designer who can predict that confidently!
It depends on how big the earthquake is. A big earthquake will cause more damage to the area.
Some scientists think that a big asteroid hit the Earth, a volcano erupted lots of poisonous lava on the dinosaurs, there was a big earthquake or because the weather was very cold.