The symbol commonly used to represent small earthquakes on seismic maps and reports is a small circle or dot. This symbol may vary in size or color depending on the earthquake's magnitude, with smaller dots indicating lesser magnitudes. Additionally, some seismic agencies may use specific color codes to differentiate between different intensity levels of earthquakes.
55 earthquakes happen in the world. small ones though.
Most parts of the world have small earthquakes every few days, small enough not to be noticed by people in general, only by instruments. Britain is fortunate that it generally has few earthquakes that cause damage, unlike places such as Pakistan and California that have had devastating earthquakes during the last 100 years or so.
Probably under 4 or 5.
There are far more magnitude 2 or 3 earthquakes than magnitude 4 earthquakes. The small quakes just don't get noticed as much because they typically do little or no serious damage.
It all depends on how big the fault is, bigger ones will cause bigger earthquakes, while smaller, or small ones may cause no earthquake at all.
they necessarily don't
No, there are some earthquakes that are so small you don't even notice them.
His symbol is the trident. When he bangs it into the cliffs earthquakes happen.
The symbol for amplitude typically uses a big 'A'.
55 earthquakes happen in the world. small ones though.
Yes. Most areas of the world can get tornadoes and at least small earthquakes.
The earthquakes are generated by magma forcing its way though and fracturing rock.
There are- but the earthquakes that happen are so small that you probably cant even feel them.
earthquakes that immediately follow a major earthquake are called "aftershocks" as to small earthquakes before large earthquakes are called "foreshocks".
true
different complication
The symbol for diminished is a small circle (°) placed after the note or chord symbol.