It made the plates move faster i don't know i am trying to fiqure it out
Undersea earthquakes or volcanic eruptions.
Underwater landslides, Underwater volcanic eruptions, and Underwater earthquakes
Tsunamis' can be formed after an undersea earthquake.
In most cases, neither. Most earthquakes are the result of plate tectonics and most volcanoes form from plate tectonics as well, but one does not usually cause the other. However, volcanoes can and do cause earthquakes, espcially if they are getting ready to erupt. On rarer occasions, earthquakes have been suspected of triggering volcanic eruptions.
Both earthquakes and volcanic eruptions are caused by movements in the Earth's crust. Earthquakes result from the sudden release of energy along fault lines, while volcanic eruptions occur when magma rises to the surface and is released through vents. Both natural phenomena can result in significant damage and pose risks to people and property.
Undersea earthquakes or volcanic eruptions.
Not usually. Although earthquakes often occur before a volcanic eruption, they are not the cause. The earthquakes are the result of magma (molten rock) moving underground leading up to an eruption. A few volcanic eruptions are thought to have been triggered or initiated by earthquakes, but this is not the typical case.
It can cause earthquakes, volcanoes, oceanic trenches, mountains, tsunamis, and subduction.
they are the same because they all cause damage to the earth
No. Eruptions are caused by magma moving up from the mantle. Earthquakes can be a sign of magma pushing the earth out of its way (causing the earthquake) which lead to the eruptions and potentially tsunamis.
No. Volcanic eruptions produce ash. Earthquakes and volcanic eruptions get clustered. A volcanic eruption can cause vibrations, while a large temblor can rattle a magma chamber under a volcano, causing towers of ash and rivers of lava to gush forth.
Underwater landslides, Underwater volcanic eruptions, and Underwater earthquakes
Tsunamis' can be formed after an undersea earthquake.
D
In most cases, neither. Most earthquakes are the result of plate tectonics and most volcanoes form from plate tectonics as well, but one does not usually cause the other. However, volcanoes can and do cause earthquakes, espcially if they are getting ready to erupt. On rarer occasions, earthquakes have been suspected of triggering volcanic eruptions.
One of the theories is that numerous violent eruptions spouted hundreds of cubic kilometres of volcanic ash into the sky, blocking the sunlight and causing an ice age. Volcanic eruptions are caused by plate tectonics (not continental drift).
Both earthquakes and volcanic eruptions are caused by movements in the Earth's crust. Earthquakes result from the sudden release of energy along fault lines, while volcanic eruptions occur when magma rises to the surface and is released through vents. Both natural phenomena can result in significant damage and pose risks to people and property.