anthing over 5.7 may cause a Tsunami
No, a 1.0 magnitude earthquake is too small to generate a tsunami. Tsunamis are typically triggered by large earthquakes with magnitudes of 7.0 or greater that displace a significant amount of water.
Tsunami is useful to generate electricity.
The Tsunami in Japan in 2011 was caused by an earthquake gesitering a magnitude 9.0.
There are Magnitude scales for Tsunamis, but you have to be a maths wizz to work them out, using the formula Mt = a log h + b log R = D.
The magnitude of the earthquake that triggered the tsunami in Japan in 2011 was 9.0. The tsunami waves that followed reached heights of up to 40 meters in some areas along the coast of Japan.
No, a 1.0 magnitude earthquake is too small to generate a tsunami. Tsunamis are typically triggered by large earthquakes with magnitudes of 7.0 or greater that displace a significant amount of water.
Tsunami is useful to generate electricity.
Yes it is possible. The 7.5 magnitude earthquake caused a large tsunami.
No
there was tsunami because the earthquake had a high magnitude,so made big that caused the tsunami
The Tsunami in Japan in 2011 was caused by an earthquake gesitering a magnitude 9.0.
Yes
an earthquake (magnitude of 9.0).
Yes, the 9.0 magnitude earthquake caused the tsunami.
There are Magnitude scales for Tsunamis, but you have to be a maths wizz to work them out, using the formula Mt = a log h + b log R = D.
The magnitude of the earthquake that triggered the tsunami in Japan in 2011 was 9.0. The tsunami waves that followed reached heights of up to 40 meters in some areas along the coast of Japan.
The 2004 tsunami was not measured on the Richter scale because tsunamis are caused by underwater disturbances, usually earthquakes, landslides, or volcanic eruptions. The earthquake that triggered the 2004 tsunami had a magnitude of 9.1-9.3 on the moment magnitude scale, not the Richter scale.