You searched for: “earthquake
A unit related to: “earthquake
(Greek: to move back and forth; to shake, to move violently; earthquake)
(a general presentation of earthquake history)
Word Entries containing the term: “earthquake
minor earthquake tremor
Faults alarm.
volcanic earthquake
A seismic disturbance that is due to the direct action of volcanic forces or one whose origin lies under or near a volcano, whether active, dormant, or extinct.
This entry is located in the following unit: volcan-, vulcan- + (page 1)
Word Entries at Get Words: “earthquake
earthquake, seism
1. A violent shaking of the earth's crust that may cause destruction to buildings and results from the sudden release of tectonic stress along a fault line or from volcanic activity.
2. Any event that causes an upheaval in society, politics, or someone's life.

Predicting Earthquakes

Almost all earthquakes are insignificant. A small segment of a fault, far underground, jerks a little, but the rumble is imperceptible at the surface and not even noticed.

With a few quakes, the fault continues to break and the ground jumps significantly resulting in the earth shaking in cataclysms.

A gap in geological knowledge apparently makes earthquake predictions a frustrating and unreliable effort to calculate the true risk that human constructions like a water reservoir or a geothermal power plant could inadvertently set off a deadly quake.

Scientists know that some human activities from oil extraction to power plants can trigger an earthquake.

Geologists do not know how the pieces of the earth's crust that usually squeeze together tightly with high friction slip past each other smoothly during a large earthquake, as if sandpaper suddenly changed into Teflon."

—Compiled from excerpts in
"The race to predict earthquakes" by Kenneth Chang;
International Herald Tribune; April 17, 2009; page 2.
This entry is located in the following unit: Geology or Related Geological Terms + (page 5)
Word Entries at Get Words containing the term: “earthquake
Earthquake Statistics
A general presentation of earthquake history unit.