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How Does an Earthquake Happen?

An earthquake is a shock wave that radiates to the Earth’s surface from underground.
Causing a range of effects from unnoticeable, mild tremors to violent, prolonged shaking,
an earthquake is a natural phenomenon that occurs frequently only in certain areas of the
world. The place where an earthquake begins underground is called the hypocenter, and
the area on the Earth’s surface directly above the hypocenter is called the epicenter and
receives the most powerful shock waves.

Movement in the Earth’s crust causes an earthquake. The Earth is made of an inner core,
an outer core, and a mantle, and the final layer is a thin crust covering the mantle, which
is the surface of the Earth including all the oceans and continents. The crust is made of
separate rocky portions called tectonic plates, which lie on the mantle like pieces of a
jigsaw puzzle. But the jigsaw puzzle is mobile, and the plates move around. Some slide
past each other horizontally, some push together and force the ground upward, some
slide beneath another plate and some pull apart. Whenever a tectonic plate moves
suddenly, this causes an earthquake.

The sudden release of friction and pressure between tectonic plates causes an
earthquake. Tectonic plates are made of rough rock and cannot slide past each other
smoothly. Friction prevents movement at the plate edges while the rest of the plates
continue to move, causing a buildup in pressure. When the pressure overcomes the
friction, the plates move suddenly, and shock waves from this sudden movement radiate
through rock, soil, buildings, and water. Usually, small foreshocks occur at first, followed
by one big mainshock. Aftershocks follow and can continue for weeks, months or even
years.

Fault lines are the areas where two or more tectonic plates join, and it’s in these areas
most earthquakes occur. Well-studied fault lines include the San Andreas Fault that runs
down the West Coast of North America and lines between Australia and Papua New
Guinea, as well as in New Zealand, Tonga, Japan, and Taiwan. Earthquakes can also
rarely occur in the middle of tectonic plates. Scientists aren’t yet able to predict
earthquakes, but people living near fault lines can help protect themselves by living in
earthquake-protected housing and practicing earthquake drills.

An earthquake damages buildings and land causes tsunamis and has many other
disastrous effects. Violent shaking from an earthquake collapses buildings, which causes
the most deaths and casualties, and destroys power lines and ruptures natural gas supply
lines, causing fires. Land can also collapse or pull apart, causing more buildings to fall.
Tsunamis occur after an earthquake on the ocean floor. The water shock wave travels
through the ocean until it dissipates or meets land. If the wave meets land, the water piles
up, creating a single wave or a series of large waves that sweep inland, causing death
and destruction

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