This is a list of different types of earthquake.
A
- Aftershock, a smaller earthquake that occurs after a previous large earthquake, in the same area of the main shock.
B
- Blind thrust earthquake, an earthquake which occurs along a thrust fault that does not show signs on the Earth's surface.
C
- Cryoseism, a seismic event that may be caused by a sudden cracking action in frozen soil or rock saturated with water or ice.
D
- Deep-focus earthquake, also called a plutonic earthquake, an earthquake with a depth exceeding .
- Doublet earthquake, an earthquake that consists of at least two or more mainshocks of nearly identical magnitude, separated by a period of time.
E
- Earthquake swarm, events where a local area experiences sequences of many earthquakes striking in a relatively short period of time.
F
- Foreshock, an earthquake that occurs before a larger seismic event (the mainshock) and is related to it in both time and space.
H
- Harmonic tremor, a sustained release of seismic and infrasonic energy typically associated with the underground movement of magma, the venting of volcanic gases from magma, or both.
I
- Induced seismicity, typically minor earthquakes and tremors that are caused by human activity that alters the stresses and strains on the Earth's crust.
- Interplate earthquake, an earthquake that occurs at the boundary between tectonic plates.
- Intraplate earthquake, an earthquake that occurs within the interior of a tectonic plate.
M
- Megathrust earthquake, an earthquake occurring at subduction zones at destructive convergent plate boundaries, where one tectonic plate is forced underneath another.
R
S
- Slow earthquake, a discontinuous, earthquake-like event that releases energy over a period of hours to months, rather than the seconds to minutes characteristic of a typical earthquake.
- Submarine earthquake, an earthquake that occurs underwater at the bottom of a body of water, especially an ocean.
- Supershear earthquake, an earthquake in which the propagation of the rupture along the fault surface occurs at speeds in excess of the seismic shear wave (S-wave) velocity, causing an effect analogous to a sonic boom.
- Strike-slip earthquake, an earthquake where two pieces of crust slide horizontally past each other.
T
- Tsunami earthquake, an earthquake that triggers a tsunami of a magnitude that is very much larger than the magnitude of the earthquake as measured by shorter-period seismic waves.
V
References
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