no, it can't happen because brick can't withstand a 1.0-8.0+ earthquake
Yes, there was an earthquake in Pompeii in 62 AD that destroyed a lot of the city.
It was San Francisco that had the earthquake.
The biggest earthquake reported in Mexico was the Mexico City Earthquake in 1985. It had a magnitude of 8.5, and caused about 10,000 deaths.
because Pakistan is a country and kasmir is a city of Pakistan
September 19, 1985.
No city is completely earthquake-proof, but some cities have stronger building codes and infrastructure to better withstand seismic activity. Tokyo, Japan and San Francisco, United States are examples of cities that have implemented strict regulations to reduce earthquake damage.
It is actually because of the dampers that are provided at the diamond shaped geometry that the building is able to transfer the earthquake forces up and sway along with it. For more help do watch this video in related links below.
In San Fransisco, since the last devastating earthquake destroyed the city, the legislature has laid down strict building regulations that require buildings to be able to withstand (within reason) the next earthquake.
people rebuilt the city to withstand more shaking but im doing this as a project so any deccent info would be great! :)
new york is
awesome
Mexico City Earthquake of July 28, 1957
An earthquake, which devastated Mexico City.
The "1985 Mexico City earthquake"http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1985_Mexico_City_earthquake
Depends on the strength of the Earthquake, the distance between the center of the quake and the city, the kind of soil the city is built on and how well the city is built.
Try "Great Hanshin Earthquake"
is in earthquake city