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We still don't know how to predict major earthquakes, and it's possible we never will

June 4, 2018

At 3:00 a.m., when everyone was sleeping, a violent earthquake struck 65 miles from Turkey’s capital in August 1999. The 7.6-magnitude quake collapsed entire apartment buildings on top of unsuspecting people, killing at least 20,000

Known as the Izmit quake, in 2011 scientists said they found convincing evidence of a precursor to the tragic temblor: A series of often small, unnoticeable quakes — known as foreshocks — occurred in the same area for around 44 minutes before the major quake struck. This, the scientists argued, was evidence of something unique happening before the massive earthquake. Read more…

More about Science, Turkey, Earthquakes, Geology, and Earthquake Aftermath


Source: Mashable | We still don't know how to predict major earthquakes, and it's possible we never will

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