- region's
seismic activity. The term was
coined by Beno
Gutenberg and
Charles Francis Richter in 1941.
Seismicity is
studied by geophysicists.
Seismicity is...
-
Seismic moment is a
quantity used by
seismologists to
measure the size of an earthquake. The
scalar seismic moment M 0 {\displaystyle M_{0}} is defined...
-
seismic energy release per unit volume. In its most
general sense, the word
earthquake is used to
describe any
seismic event that
generates seismic waves...
- A
seismic wave is a
mechanical wave of
acoustic energy that
travels through the
Earth or
another planetary body. It can
result from an
earthquake (or...
- A
seismic source is a
device that
generates controlled seismic energy used to
perform both
reflection and
refraction seismic surveys. A
seismic source...
- A
seismic gap is a
segment of an
active fault known to
produce significant earthquakes that has not
slipped in an
unusually long time,
compared with other...
-
Seismic retro****ing is the
modification of
existing structures to make them more
resistant to
seismic activity,
ground motion, or soil
failure due to...
- In seismology, a
Seismic Zone or
Seismic Belt is an area of
seismicity potentially sharing a
common cause. It can be
referred to as an
Earthquake Belt...
- of
earthquake environmental effects such as
tsunamis as well as
diverse seismic sources such as volcanic, tectonic, glacial, fluvial,
oceanic microseism...
- In geophysics,
vertical seismic profile (VSP) is a
technique of
seismic measurements used for
correlation with
surface seismic data. The
defining characteristic...