BY what it seems you mean earthquake really. But a marsquake or earthquakes on mars don't exist because the planet has no tectonic plates like earth does
Yes because in Earth an earthquake is called an earthquake but in mars it will be called a Mars-quake or even in any other planets.
Quake Live was created on 2010-08-06.
Mars has minimal direct effects on Earth. The gravitational pull of Mars does exert a small influence on Earth's orbit, but it is negligible compared to the effects of the Moon or even other planets like Jupiter. Mars is too far away to have any significant impact on Earth's daily life or environment.
A big quake on the ricter scale should be more than 8.2 to trigger a tsunami.
The quake's magnitude, depth, location, and impact determine how it compares with other quakes. It's important to consider factors like infrastructure resilience and population density in affected areas to understand the true impact of a quake relative to others. Each quake is unique, and experts use various measures to evaluate and compare their significance.
Most dictionaries do not yet recognize Marsquake, but it is often used instead of "Martian earthquake", which does sound awkward. "Groundquake" might be used or just "quake".
Yes because in Earth an earthquake is called an earthquake but in mars it will be called a Mars-quake or even in any other planets.
people died
Yes. There are meteor craters all over Mars.
Yes. The effects of gravety on Mars are less than on Earth. Mars has 37.6% of Earth's gravity.
there are all sorts of things that happen after an earthquake like power going out
After the quake was created in 2000-02.
After the quake has 201 pages.
i earth quake
Quake Inc. was created in 2001.
Quake Live happened in 2010.
Alaska Quake was created in 2011.