True earthquakes and volcanoes can cause landslides.
Earthquakes themselves are natural disasters, and they can trigger secondary events such as tsunamis, landslides, and liquefaction. Volcanic eruptions can also be associated with earthquakes, especially in regions with active volcanic activity.
Indirectly. The movement of tectonic plates is the cause of the majority of earthquakes. Earthquakes can cause landslides.
Fire is often, but not always a secondary effect of earthquakes. If the earthquake strikes a populated area, it is likely to break natural gas pipes, and to cause other damage in human structures that will result in fires. In an unpopulated region, an earthquake may not cause a fire.
Earthquakes and landslides both involve the movement of the Earth's crust. Earthquakes can trigger landslides by shaking loose rocks and soil on steep slopes, causing them to give way and slide downhill. Both natural disasters can have devastating impacts on communities and infrastructure.
Earthquakes can trigger both landslides and tsunamis.
Vegetation, angle of slope, undercutting of the foot, hight of the water table, soil rheology, earthquakes, rainfall, human activity, geology call all effect landslides.
True earthquakes and volcanoes can cause landslides.
Earthquakes themselves are natural disasters, and they can trigger secondary events such as tsunamis, landslides, and liquefaction. Volcanic eruptions can also be associated with earthquakes, especially in regions with active volcanic activity.
Earthquakes make earth's surface move downward just like a mudslide, or up, sometimes.
Indirectly. The movement of tectonic plates is the cause of the majority of earthquakes. Earthquakes can cause landslides.
Fire is often, but not always a secondary effect of earthquakes. If the earthquake strikes a populated area, it is likely to break natural gas pipes, and to cause other damage in human structures that will result in fires. In an unpopulated region, an earthquake may not cause a fire.
Volcanic activity and Earthquakes are two. And two more are Landslides and avalanches.
Earthquakes and landslides both involve the movement of the Earth's crust. Earthquakes can trigger landslides by shaking loose rocks and soil on steep slopes, causing them to give way and slide downhill. Both natural disasters can have devastating impacts on communities and infrastructure.
earthquakes can cause tsunamis, landslides, flooding, and volcanos
Secondary effect is also known as cause and effect.With ref to earthquakes, this can be explained as1st effect The earthquake shakes the ground and collapses a building, breaking a gas pipe2nd effect The gas is ignited causing an explosion
Plate tectonics cause earthquakes when tectonic plates move and release built-up stress at their boundaries. Landslides can occur during earthquakes when the shaking of the ground causes slope failures. Tidal waves, or tsunamis, can be generated by underwater earthquakes or landslides that displace large volumes of water.