the Nepalese love peace. however, some conflicts occured in Nepal from time to time. what should be done to solve some. inflicts in future offer any four suggestion
Answers
It is notoriously difficult to predict an earthquake, although the science has reached a stage where it may be possible to give some kind of reasonable assessment of risk for a given, well-studied location within a seismically-active region.
Earthquakes generally occur on a geological fault line where vast masses of rock grind against each other with the slow, tectonic movement of the Earth’s crust. Occasionally this movement gets stuck, leading to a build-up of stress and energy, which can be suddenly released in an earthquake.
Forecasting is of little use for day-to-day planning. No city could be evacuated, for instance, on a risk assessment that gives a 20 per cent probability of an earthquake occurring in the next few years. What people need is an early-warning system similar to Hurricane notices, which give high probabilities of something occurring within a reasonably short time period, and at a well-defined location.
Unfortunately, although the science of earthquake forecasting is quite advanced, it is nowhere near the stage of reaching a deterministic prediction. For this to happen, seismologists need to find something that reliably happens in a small window of space and time before the earthquake strikes – in other words a “diagnostic precursor”.
“So far, the search for diagnostic precursors has been unsuccessful. Most geoscientists do not believe that there is a realistic prospect of accurate prediction in the foreseeable future, and the principal focus of research is on improving the forecasting of earthquakes,” according to the Geological Society.