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Earthquake

Earthquake is a term used to describe both sudden slip on a fault, and the resulting ground shaking and radiated seismic energy caused by the slip, or by volcanic or magmatic activity, or other sudden stress changes in the Earth (USGS).

Until the arrival of COVID-19, earthquakes were the natural hazard that caused the most deaths per event. EM-DAT figures show that earthquakes claimed more than 720,000 lives between 2000 and 2019. Not included in this future are the over 50,000 deaths in the earthquake that struck Turkey and Syria in February 2023. More than 3 billion people live in regions prone to earthquakes

Most earthquakes are caused by the movement of the earth’s 15 tectonic plates. Geophysicists can identify places where earthquakes are sure to happen, but nobody can predict when an earthquake will happen, or its severity. Seismologists register more than 30,000 tremors every year, but most of these are of low magnitude.

An earthquake strikes. You’re indoors. What do you do? In just seconds, the right action can save your life.

Earthquakes may be rare, but when they strike, the consequences can be devastating. By strengthening buildings, communities, and knowledge, we can save lives and protect futures.

International Day in Memory of the Victims of Earthquakes

Earthquakes are among the deadliest natural hazards. The International day is an opportunity for remembrance and renewed commitment to protecting lives and livelihoods from earthquake disasters.

While technology does not yet exist for reducing earthquake hazards, the risk to buildings, infrastructure and human population can be mitigated by seismic retrofitting of existing buildings, improved compliance with seismic safety building guidelines, and avoidance of building on cliff faces, soft soils or next to an active fault (HIP, 2021). Some success has also been achieved in developing early warning systems, which detect earthquakes close to the source or fault rupture, and trigger warnings to more distant locations, providing seconds to minutes of advance warning (Gasparini et al., 2007).

Risk factors

Many factors aggravate earthquake risks, including:

  • Population density: eight out of the 10 most populated cities in the world are prone to earthquakes.
  • Most of the world’s earthquakes occur around the Pacific Rim, in areas where two-thirds of the world’s population lives.
  • Poorly built and non-engineered buildings.
  • Poverty: constrains more people to live in crowded, substandard housing and unsafe places.

The Scales

One of the ranking systems used to measure earthquake magnitudes is called the Richter Scale. Developed by Charles Richter in 1935, this scale is used to measure earthquake magnitude (ML). It indicates the energy released by an earthquake.

Because of some limitations of all the Richter magnitude scales and its extensions (ML, Mb, and Ms), a new more uniformly applicable extension of the magnitude scale, known as moment magnitude, or Mw, was developed. In particular, for very large earthquakes, moment magnitude gives the most reliable estimate of earthquake size. Moment is a physical quantity proportional to the slip on the fault multiplied by the area of the fault surface that slips; it is related to the total energy released in the earthquake.

Another ranking system, the Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale, measures seismic intensity. The magnitude of an earthquake is a measured value of the earthquake size. The intensity of an earthquake is a measure of the shaking created by the earthquake; this value varies with location.

Richter Scale Categories

Richter scaleEffect
< 3.5Generally not felt, but recorded
3.5 - 5.5Felt, but rarely causing any damage
< 6.0Slight damage to well-constructed buildings, heavy damage to poorly constructed buildings
6.1 - 6.9May damage inhabited areas up to 100 km wide
7.0 - 7.9Major earthquake that may cause serious damage in a very wide area
> 8.0>Serious earthquake that causes damage hundreds of kilometres away from the epicentre
> 9.0>Rare great earthquake, major damage in a large region of over 1,000 km

Source: USGS

Risk reduction measures

  • Integrating seismic risk into land-use planning and urban development strategies in earthquake-prone zones.
  • Ensure that building codes are enforced in critical high-use and high-occupancy infrastructure: hospitals, schools, housing, factories in earthquake zones.
  • Warning systems to cut off gas and electricity supplies to reduce fire risk.
  • Improving education and awareness through training and preparedness programmes in schools and workplaces on the importance of building safety.

Latest Earthquake additions in the Knowledge Base

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Seismic capacity survey and earthquake risk assessment of self-built buildings in rural areas of Shanghai Municipality thumbnail
Documents and publications

This study conducted field research and theoretical calculations to gain an overall understanding of the seismic performance of these buildings.

International Journal of Disaster Risk Science
Update

The GEM 2026 products update and expand the global view of seismic hazard and risk to include infrastructure exposure to liquefaction, future risk trajectories, and the carbon cost of earthquake damage and reconstruction.

Global Earthquake Model Foundation (GEM)
Rethinking architectural education post-disaster: an analytical framework for curricular transformation after the 2023 Kahramanmaraş earthquakes thumbnail
Documents and publications

This study conducts a comparative analysis of the presence and evolution of disaster and earthquake-focused courses in Turkish public and foundation universities between 2022 and 2025.

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications (Nature)
Update

Japan's government has approved a revised plan to prepare for a major earthquake centered on the greater Tokyo area.

NHK World, Japan International Broadcasting
Evolution of earthquake crisis management and recovery in Italy after 2009: An expert commentary thumbnail
Documents and publications

This paper presents an expert commentary on lessons learned across five dimensions: governance, community engagement, technical assessment tools, professional mobilization, and urban reconstruction.

International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction (Elsevier)
Turkmenistan earthquake
Research briefs

Sedimentary basins – depressions in Earth’s crust caused by tectonic activity – tend to be flat and are favoured places to build cities. But during earthquakes, they can become natural resonance chambers.

Conversation Media Group, the
Automatic sentiment analysis of citizen comments: the case of the Albania earthquake
Documents and publications

This study investigates how crowdsourced user comments collected through the LastQuake app can be used to improve situational awareness following an earthquake.

GeoHazards (MDPI)
Damaged building 2023 Türkiye-Syria earthquake
Update

A timber building that kept itself centred through major shaking has aced a full‑scale earthquake test with no damage, with more than 60 industry professionals looking on.

University of Auckland
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