The impact of an earthquake can be measured in various ways, including its magnitude, duration, and the extent of damage it caused. The duration of an earthquake typically lasts from a few seconds to a couple of minutes, but the effects can be felt for much longer, especially in terms of aftershocks and recovery. The damage can vary significantly based on the earthquake's magnitude, depth, and proximity to populated areas. If you have a specific earthquake in mind, please provide more details for a more precise answer.
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Mercalli Scale
by mercalli scale.
Because the mud could cover the whole place that the earthquake took place inAnd...there would be 2 much...
Heavy rain can be danger of liquefaction because of the wet mud that can cover the whole place that the earthquake took place in. Also heavy rain can make an earthquake much more dangerous.
because of the earthquake
YES?
It was an Earthquake.
All the homes that was in the earthquake got damage really really bad.
It probbubly took a month or two because Japan needed to rebuild the buildings and help get people to safety and maybe they even needed to prepare for the future earthquake
An 8.5 Earthquake is MUCH larger and does more damage.
The Japanese crisis that took place in 2011 was an earthquake and tsunami. It was the most powerful documented earthquake to hit Japan and one of the five most disastrous earthquakes in the world.
There's just been a big one in China
A Earthquake is located where the two plates (a plate boundary) meet and there is to much pressure building up and that is how and where a earthquake is and how it happens.
Normal faults are when you have hanging walls that slide down relative to and below the footwall. Dip-slip faults are normal faults.