Callisto does not have volcanoes, geysers, or tectonic activity like Earth. Some impact craters on Callisto may have undergone tectonic modification. It is thought that the moon is geologically dead, with a frozen, icy surface that has remained mostly unchanged for billions of years.
yes im doing a project on sun quakes, moon quakes, and mars quakes
they use very strong technolygy no one knows for sure wut it is called
The moon does not have moon quakes; it appears to be 'geologically' dead. The moon's core is smaller in proportion than is earth's core. At one time the moon was volcanically active, but it is no longer. It has cooled sufficiently so that internal energy is no longer sufficient to produce such activity.
The Apollo 11 astronauts left a meter on the moon to find out if there are any moon quakes, well there are moon quakes, and they found it hostile windless and that there was no water on the moon then.
Yes! Occasionally there are moon quakes. This generates sound waves. However, a sound wave must travel through some medium. There is no atmosphere on the moon and so we don't hear these being emitted. You would have to put a listening device on the rocky dusty surface to "hear" the quakes. Sound travels well in solid material. I've always been able to listen to the valves in my car engine best by taking a cut off broom stick, touching the engine with it, and resting my ear on the other end of the broom stick.
There are no quakes or geysers on Titan, which is one of Saturn's moons. Titan has a thick atmosphere, methane lakes, and cryovolcanoes, but seismic activity and geysers like those found on Earth are not present on Titan.
Sometimes they do.
nope. but one of its moons does.
you get loads of volcanoes, earth quakes and floods
No. Neptune is a gas giant. This means it is made of gas, therefore does not have a solid surface. Without a solid surface, it is impossible for plate activity such as quakes and volcanoes to occur.
Earth quakes and tsunami (also volcanoes)
The tectonic plates are constantly moving around and if (or even when) they hit each other they cause earth quakes and even volcanoes.
* pollution * green house gases * littering * wild fires * tsunamis * earth quakes * tornados * waste products * volcanoes * meteorites
The quakes directly associated with the movement of magma are concentrated beneath the island's active volcanoes, Kilauea and Mauna Loa. Very shallow quakes frequently precede or accompany an eruption. Hundreds of such quakes make up swarms that commonly occur over a period of several hours or days before an eruption as magma forces its way into a new area. These quakes are seldom large enough to cause widespread damage, but they may produce extensive ground fracturing close to the potential eruption site. Once an eruption begins, the quakes usually diminish.
Yes, Neptune does not have any volcanoes on its surface. It is a gas giant composed mainly of hydrogen, helium, and some methane. The extreme temperatures and pressure on Neptune would prevent the formation of traditional volcanoes as seen on rocky planets like Earth.
volcanoes,earthquakes,mountains (volcanoe's make after they die) also tsunami's
This is where the fault lines of the North American and Pacific plate meet, an areas where there is lots of earthquakes, tsunamis (caused by quakes) and volcanoes. Underneath these cracks in the Earth is magma (lava inside the earth), every once in a while, this magma will come to the surface and form volcanoes. and that is basically itUser:Hectoria29