They have a interactive map of latest earthquakes I've been looking at for a few minutes now. I have never considered how many earthquakes (albeit mostly minor) occur daily. There were 68 with magnitude of 2.5 or higher today! Really fascinating to consider.
I was mostly joking last time I posted this (and as perhaps should have been, was downvoted) but this is the third or fourth major earthquake on the pacific rim in the last month or so. Couldn't these be signs of a very strong earthquake to come?
What scares me is how it's been mostly the western Pacific Rim (Japan, Taiwan, Indonesia) getting quakes. That tells me that things might be getting a little unstable on the eastern Pacific Rim, assuming the Earth keeps things "balanced".
Well, an earthquake relives stress along a fault. It's not like there's some feedback effect where the shocks before, during, and after a quake cause further instability on the other side of the planet just because they share a tectonic plate.
I started noticing this and did a bit if research. These are fairly significant size earthquakes and since measurement there are not very many >8 in magnitude.
I also have this picture in my mind of the pacific plates slowly twisting progressively clockwise... not that I know a whole lot about how this all works.
That... Doesn't seem likely. I've only taken a few geology classes during my undergrad, but considering these are earthquakes in a subduction zone, it doesn't seem possible that some lateral forces would be causing these quakes.
That was a massive earthquake and it's unbelievable luck that there are no reports of casualties (probably because it hit a rural area).
But, please, can the title be corrected? The magnitude of the quake was 7.9 on the (logarithmic) Richter scale. That's considerably different to 8.0 scale (by a few million gigajoules at that).
Edit: Thanks for the correction. To give an idea of the difference in magnitude:
8.0 Richter in joules: 63,095,730,000,000,000.00
7.9 Ricther in joules: 44,668,360,000,000,000.00
> In the United States, the Richter scale was succeeded in the 1970s by the moment magnitude scale. The moment magnitude scale is now the scale used by the United States Geological Survey to estimate magnitudes for all modern large earthquakes
which is similar but not the same. From that page's wikipedia article:
> Popular press reports of earthquake magnitude usually fail to distinguish between magnitude scales, and are often reported as "Richter magnitudes" when the reported magnitude is a moment magnitude (or a surface-wave or body-wave magnitude). Because the scales are intended to report the same results within their applicable conditions, the confusion is minor.
The difference mostly seems to be to do with distinguishing several quakes in a similar location.
Makes sense for the title to reflect the article content, but isn't it normal for the measurement to be updated several times after such incidents? I thought it was based on estimates from nearby locations, with full data only arriving and being analysed after several days. I often see multiple different numbers, and separated by more than 0.1.
I find measures of ground movement good for visualising what happened and how violent it must have been. Not that this is helpful sometimes with silent quakes generating a fair amount to movement (via GPS measure) in New Zealand lately. The recent 7.8 caused up to 10m of fault slip and 5.5m of uplift. The changes are truely colossal.
Honestly, would you have pictured the damage in your mind differently if you read about 7.8 vs 7.9? I can imagine the jump from 7 to 8 makes a difference, but it's just 0.1, which I doubt anyone can picture the difference between.