Geography, asked by sravni99, 1 year ago

give geographical reasons the destructive effects of an earthquake are far more than its constructive effect give reason to support your answer​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
10

Answer:

The primary effects of earthquakes are ground shaking, ground rupture, landslides, tsunamis, and liquefaction. Fires are probably the single most important secondary effect of earthquakes...

Short answer is: we can't. While we can definitely identify areas of the world where earthquakes are more likely to occur, it's actually not currently possible to predict exactly when or where an earthquake is going to happen. To understand why, we need to know exactly what an earthquake is, and what causes them.

Answered by bratislava
1

It depends in the intensity and magnitude of force that earthquakes apply.

Explanation:

  • An earthquake i.e is a  shaking of the group surface which is caused due to the movement of tectonic plates and release of the seismic waves for the center of the earth.
  • Most of the earthquakes create destructive waves such as the P and L waves which have large scale impacts on the tall structure such as buildings, bridges and is against the constructive impact of the earthquakes  
  • Most of the destructive activities include the loss of human lives loss property, and even flash floods. If the earthquakes lie on the fault lines they create incremental damage and thus create newer landforms as constructive.

Learn more about the geographical reasons the destructive effects of an earthquake are far more than its constructive effect.

  • brainly.in/question/11917462 answered by nageshwar70.
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