Buildings tend to fall down in big earthquakes, and often kill the people living in them.
Roads are often buckled or split, and bridges have been known to fall down or break. For example, in the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake in California, one segment of the Oakland to San Francisco Bay Bridge collapsed, killing one motorist, and a long segment of elevated freeway in Oakland collapsed, crushing the cars on the lower level as the upper deck fell down.
Earthquakes sometimes start fires when buildings collapse, and all too often the water system is also broken, disabling some or all of the fire hydrants.
Earthquakes can form hazards such as ground shaking, ground rupture, landslides, tsunamis, and liquefaction. These hazards can result in damage to buildings and infrastructure, injuries, and loss of life. It is important to be prepared for these potential hazards in earthquake-prone regions.
Earthquakes and eruptions.
earthquakes, hurricanes, tornadoes
From earthquakes and being landlocked without any food or drink
Underwater earthquakes can trigger tsunamis, which pose significant hazards to coastal areas, leading to devastating flooding and destruction. They can also cause underwater landslides, disrupting marine ecosystems and affecting shipping routes. Additionally, seismic activity can damage underwater infrastructure, such as pipelines and communication cables, resulting in environmental hazards and economic loss.
I think the natural hazards are earthquakes and hurricane's.
earthquakes
indirect hazards are hazards that have immediate affect, while direct hazards are hazards that is caused by something else before it affects
earthquakes and volcanoes
Earthquakes.
Hurricanes, earthquakes and storms
Earthquakes can form hazards such as ground shaking, ground rupture, landslides, tsunamis, and liquefaction. These hazards can result in damage to buildings and infrastructure, injuries, and loss of life. It is important to be prepared for these potential hazards in earthquake-prone regions.
There are a couple different natural hazards that affect Alaska. Earthquakes, floods, hurricanes, and wildfires are all hazards in Alaska. There is also a volcano in Alaska that formed in 1912 called Novarupta.
A geoscientist (specifically a geologist or seismologist) studies natural hazards like volcanoes and earthquakes to better understand their causes, behavior, and potential impacts on human populations. They work to assess and mitigate risks associated with these hazards to protect communities and the environment.
Tsunami, earthquakes, volcanoes,
Earthquakes and eruptions.
Lithuania experiences earthquakes.