Ten Largest Earthquakes of the Century25 Largest Earthquakes in the United StatesThe Great San Francisco Earthquake of 1906Encyclopedia: EarthquakesEncyclopedia: TsunamiFrequency of EarthquakesSeismologyFloods, Avalanches, and Tidal WavesQuiz: Disasters

Earthquakes are caused by forces deep within Earth’s interior that continuously affect its surface. When the energy from these forces is released suddenly—usually by shearing movements along faults in the Earth’s crust—an earthquake results. See also plate tectonics.

Not “On the Richter Scale”

Although “on the Richter Scale” is still a commonly used expression, the scale, developed by Charles F. Richter of California Institute of Technology in 1935, is no longer the most commonly used magnitude measurement. One of its flaws is its imprecision in measuring the biggest earthquakes, those in the range of 8 or 9. Different methods of measuring magnitude have superseded the Richter Scale, including surface-wave magnitude, which measures the seismic waves crackling around Earth’s surface, and moment magnitude, the newest method, which is based on the size of the fault on which an earthquake occurs and the amount the Earth slips. Moment magnitude is the most uniformly applicable scale.

Intensity versus Magnitude

These two terms are often confused: intensity is based on the observed effects of an earthquake on its surroundings, whereas magnitude measures the amount of seismic energy released. The Modified Mercalli (MM) Intensity Scale measures 12 increasing levels of intensity (each designated by a Roman numeral) from imperceptible shaking to catastrophic destruction. More subjective and less scientific than magnitude, intensity is nevertheless a meaningful way of capturing the terror and destruction of an earthquake. It is the intensity of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake that is remembered, not its magnitude.

The Twentieth Century’s Largest Earthquake

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