Probably because it isn't very close to a fault line.
No they are not, relatively few earthquakes have ever been recorded in Australia as it is a very stable continent with no active volcanoes and few if no earthquakes.
Yes.
It depends which London you are talking about. London, England, is not experiencing any earthquakes, as England cannot actually have earthquakes.
There are very few factories left in London.
Australia isnt on the edge of any tectonic plates
Every state gets tornadoes. Pennsylvania and Ohio have even had F4 and F5 tornadoes. The inland states do not get hurricanes. The Dakotas, Florida, and Michigan have only have a few small earthquakes. Pennsylvania has had a few earthquakes, but none have been very damaging.
Big Ben is in London, England which doesn't have a problem with earthquakes.
Earthquakes are very hard to predict a long time before they happen, they can only br predicted a few minutes before they are going to happen
Extremely few. Most earthquakes happen in the ocean, or too far below the crust for us to feel them, but hundreds happen every week.
Normally, when the word multitude is used in conjunction with earthquakes, it refers to the number of earthquakes, not their strength. The number of earthquakes is linked to the activity of the Earth crust. Because the activity of the Earth crust is very slow, it is very difficult to establish the highest multitude of earthquakes for a location. In a location there may not be earthquakes for thousands of years, then in a space of a few days the area could experience hundreds of earthquakes. There are locations which are very active today, which allows statistical studies. But the parameters are very dynamic. This is one of the reasons why it is not possible to predict earthquakes.
No. Most earthquakes last just a few minutes. It is rare for an earthquake to last more than a minute. The very strongest and longest-lived earthquakes may last for up to 5 minutes.
London has ghost because a lot of people died from the London fire (I think)which last for a few days and spread very far.