Greetings! Just a quick question, the video mentions that earthquakes were caused by sliding the plates with each other. But what about when the plates move apart from each other or collides with each other? Do earthquakes form that way too? I know mountains form when plates collides against each other but will earthquake form too? Thank you!
Yep! Earthquakes can happen from any movement of plates but some are stronger that others. So, like you said, transform (sliding) plates cause earthquakes bc when they go past each other, they get stuck and then when they get unstuck, pressure is released. It's the most common cause for earthquakes. Convergent (collision) plates also have earthquakes. When 2 SIAL (continental) plates collide it forms mountains and can cause earthquakes because of the movement. When SIAL and SIMA collide, the SIMA goes down because it is denser but when it is going down, the 2 plates can get stuck and the same thing happens (the stored energy is release when they get loose and causes and earthquake which can cause tsunamis. They also creat volcanoes. When 2 SIMA (oceanic) plates collide, they form a trench and cause earthquakes which can cause tsunamis When plates diverge (move away), the movement can cause earthquakes as well. sorry if it's a lot of information. I'm writing my Geography exam tmr 😅
I know you asked this question 2 months ago and weren't given a direct and clear answer on what to do, so for future reference, if you cite your references/sources, you can use information you gather from different places. It's just like when I used to have research papers, etc., when I was in school (except back then, I used encyclopedias, thesaurus, etc.) When I was in school, we didn't have WiFi - it was still connected through the phone lines - so I had to work around that. For this particular video, you would cite "explainitychannel" and the title. Good luck in your classes! (ps: You're able to use the info you find around the internet, but if you're paraphrasing in your own words, it's still a good idea to cite your sources just in case. That's how people are able to write articles on the same exact thing...just doing the research and putting it into their own words. Hope this helps!)
Here cuz nj & ny got a lil shake today small but still
Same.. im near Philly
Same.
Same in Philly
Me too
Yup same reason I'm here
Moroccan here, to see why this happened in Marrakech. Thanks for the explanation!
As a Brazilian, I am very thankful for the location of my country. Pretty much no earthquake risk at all here
I live in NYC. We had one today. Scary feeling.
I’m here cause we just had an earthquake in New Jersey!
Same Philly
U guys had it again like an hour ago to right
I’m here for the aftershock, felt it in queens.
@@robden5368 what time did that happen
Here bc I just experienced an earthquake in NYC lol
and another one few mins ago
What about water reservoirs induced earth quakes, meteorite impact earthquakes, landslide related earth quakes?
Very easy to understand explanation. THANK YOU
They're still scary when they happen. Even though I've lived through them all. I still freak out like a kid 😅
Greetings! Just a quick question, the video mentions that earthquakes were caused by sliding the plates with each other. But what about when the plates move apart from each other or collides with each other? Do earthquakes form that way too? I know mountains form when plates collides against each other but will earthquake form too? Thank you!
Yep! Earthquakes can happen from any movement of plates but some are stronger that others.
So, like you said, transform (sliding) plates cause earthquakes bc when they go past each other, they get stuck and then when they get unstuck, pressure is released. It's the most common cause for earthquakes.
Convergent (collision) plates also have earthquakes. When 2 SIAL (continental) plates collide it forms mountains and can cause earthquakes because of the movement.
When SIAL and SIMA collide, the SIMA goes down because it is denser but when it is going down, the 2 plates can get stuck and the same thing happens (the stored energy is release when they get loose and causes and earthquake which can cause tsunamis. They also creat volcanoes.
When 2 SIMA (oceanic) plates collide, they form a trench and cause earthquakes which can cause tsunamis
When plates diverge (move away), the movement can cause earthquakes as well.
sorry if it's a lot of information. I'm writing my Geography exam tmr 😅
Here because I just experienced a strong and short one in Guam, born and raised.
good explanation, foremost for a student like me that have to explain this for a oral test
Sounds fun
Ok I trust it cuz explainity explained it
Permission to use thanks
i am here cause i was stoned and i need to know now ..
Can i use this video for my project???
I guess that's a no
@@xxsoulfooxx2317 tbh
Yes you can but you must put the link for reference
I know you asked this question 2 months ago and weren't given a direct and clear answer on what to do, so for future reference, if you cite your references/sources, you can use information you gather from different places. It's just like when I used to have research papers, etc., when I was in school (except back then, I used encyclopedias, thesaurus, etc.) When I was in school, we didn't have WiFi - it was still connected through the phone lines - so I had to work around that. For this particular video, you would cite "explainitychannel" and the title. Good luck in your classes! (ps: You're able to use the info you find around the internet, but if you're paraphrasing in your own words, it's still a good idea to cite your sources just in case. That's how people are able to write articles on the same exact thing...just doing the research and putting it into their own words. Hope this helps!)
How was your project?
im js here bc of ny science test
Here because of the jersey quakes.
Here because of all the recent ones in Taiwan 😵💫
Lol who else is stuck on the first 3 mins rewinding just to understand it better
I would like to see all that happening if you presented actual footage instead of animations.
Nj got one at 10:23am and an aftershock at 6pm. It was weird since we don’t get them here. Ik Californians are laugh at us east coasts right now
Where is micro
Is there only 4 different quakes?!
Here after Melbourne, Victoria, Australia’s earthquake on 28 May 2023 😅
Federal!
The 10 euro affects is like
You wish 😂😆😂
We aren't stupid!! What a waste of both time and money posting this!!