I am not sure that they actually do have more Earthquakes in the Northern hemisphere. However, as the Northern Hemisphere has more land mass than the Southern Hemisphere, more land based Earthquakes will inevitably be detected.
Earthquakes occur globally, regardless of hemisphere. However, regions along tectonic plate boundaries, like the Pacific Ring of Fire, experience more frequent and intense seismic activity. These regions happen to include areas in both the northern and southern hemispheres.
In Nepal they've found that more earthquakes happen in the northern hemisphere's winter. A few articles say this is due to increased rain fall, but I think it has more to do with the northern hemisphere reaching full solar aphelion (cloest point of orbit) in early January. This closer proximity to the sun exerts a huge gravitational pull on earth, triggering earthquakes.
Microthermal climates are limited to the Northern Hemisphere because they are characterized by significant temperature variations between summer and winter, which are more pronounced in areas at higher latitudes. This is due to the tilt of the Earth's axis, which creates more extreme seasonal changes in the Northern Hemisphere compared to the Southern Hemisphere.
The Southern Hemisphere has more ocean than the Northern Hemisphere, which acts as a heat sink, moderating the temperature variations. In the Southern Hemisphere, the distribution of land and water is more uniform, leading to smaller temperature fluctuations. The presence of the Antarctic ice sheet also helps stabilize temperatures in the Southern Hemisphere.
It is a hurricane that forms under the equater. In the northern hemisphere hurricanes turn counter-clockwise. They are called Typhoons in the southern hemisphere and recently a Hurricane was seen to cross the equator which is very worrying for our future climate.
Earthquakes occur globally, regardless of hemisphere. However, regions along tectonic plate boundaries, like the Pacific Ring of Fire, experience more frequent and intense seismic activity. These regions happen to include areas in both the northern and southern hemispheres.
In Nepal they've found that more earthquakes happen in the northern hemisphere's winter. A few articles say this is due to increased rain fall, but I think it has more to do with the northern hemisphere reaching full solar aphelion (cloest point of orbit) in early January. This closer proximity to the sun exerts a huge gravitational pull on earth, triggering earthquakes.
There is more land in the Northern Hemisphere than in the Southern Hemisphere.
Ozone depletion does not occur more over the northern hemisphere than anywhere else. More people with money for instrumentation, access to publication channels, and over-the-pole aircraft flights occur in the northern hemisphere.
If you mean hemisphere, they occur in both. Tropical Cyclones spin counter-clockwise in the northern hemisphere, and clockwise in the southern. The North Hemisphere is generally more active and produces more intense storms than the southern though.
The Northern hemisphere has more land surface.
The Southern Hemisphere has more area of water then the Northern Hemisphere.
The Northern Hemisphere contains more land than the Southern Hemisphere. The Northern Hemisphere has more continents, larger landmasses, and a higher population density compared to the Southern Hemisphere.
There are more countries in the northern hemisphere.
The Northern Hemisphere.
The northern hemisphere has more land than the southern hemisphere. The majority of Earth's landmass is located in the northern hemisphere, which includes large continents such as North America, Europe, and Asia.
If it is winter in the northern hemisphere, the southern hemisphere will get more of the sun's radiation.