It depends where you are.
All kinds of weather can occur during earthquakes as there is no link between weather and the occurrence of earthquakes.
This is known as an aftershock.
There is no such thing as "earthquake weather." Tornadoes and hurricanes are both violent storms and therefore forms of extreme weather. Earthquakes are geologic events and are not weather-related.
It can cause tsunamis.
Epicenter
All kinds of weather can occur during earthquakes as there is no link between weather and the occurrence of earthquakes.
There is no known link between earthquakes / seismic activity and weather. So earthquake weather is the weather that by pure chance happened to be occuring at the same time an earthquake occurred.
an earthquake has a weather goelogic
A seaquake is a type of earthquake that occurs under the seafloor.
uner the sea or ocean when two big rocks hit together or replace and the cyclone forms so as a result tsunami occurs
Weather occurs on Earth due to a combination of factors like sunlight, the atmosphere, and the planet's rotation. This leads to phenomena like rain, snow, thunderstorms, and winds which are all part of the Earth's weather systems.
what the earthquake is often going to be like : it will have a better chance of being more violent or less because they have earthquakes all the time
Weather that occurs on Jupiter is basically the same as the weather on Earth
This is known as an aftershock.
after shock
At the time it was overcast. Some areas were experiencing rain or snow. The tsunami was not related to the weather, but was instead the result of an earthquake.
A tsunami is a large wave caused by an earthquake, and as such it is not really a kind of weather, but it does have the capacity to get things wet, much like rain, only more so. Tsunamis are created when there is a huge explosion like an earthquake. Imagine that a rock is it the ripple rise and that represents the tsunami.