Question:
How long does an earthquakes aftershock take to hit?
Nick
14 years ago
I live on the east coast and we recently experienced an earthquake which im sure you all have heard of, and apparently another earthquake recently hit within the most recent 30 minutes from my posting of this question at 1:40 am. Is it possible for an aftershock to hit 2 days after an earthquake?
Five answers:
Daxter
14 years ago
i live on the epicenter of these quakes and they always wake me up. and yes it is possible their are earth quakes that have aftershocks a week later
?
9 years ago
An earthquake sufficiently huge to reason harm will in all risk be accompanied by utilising countless felt aftershocks interior the 1st hour. the cost of aftershocks decreases with out delay - the cut back is proportional to the inverse of time because of the fact the main significant ask your self. this ability the 2nd day has a pair of million/2 the variety of aftershocks of the 1st day and the 10th has a pair of million/10 the variety of the 1st day. those varieties describe in basic terms the final habit of aftershocks; the relatively cases, numbers and places of the aftershocks are random. We call an earthquake an aftershock as long because of the fact the cost at which earthquakes ensue in that region is larger than the cost earlier the main significant ask your self. How long this lasts relies upon on the size of the main significant ask your self (better earthquakes have greater aftershocks) and how energetic the region grew to become into earlier the main significant ask your self (if the region grew to become into seismically quiet earlier the main significant ask your self, the aftershocks proceed above the previous cost for an prolonged time). subsequently, an aftershock can ensue weeks or a protracted time after a important ask your self.
paul h
14 years ago
Aftershocks can occur for hours, days, weeks or months after a quake and it's also possible that the initial quake and the shocks after it are preludes to an even larger quake so it's best to be cautious for a while. The recent quake in Japan was preceded by many quakes and shocks of various intensity befoere the main one hit....and many occurred after it for some time. The East coast is not as seismically active as Japan so there is probably less reason to be concerned of a larger quake although it is technically still possible. The 1896 quake in South Carolina was a magnitude 7.6.
?
14 years ago
Yes it is possible. Aftershocks can hit up to a month after an earthquake depending on the power of the earthquake and where the earthquake was.
anonymous
14 years ago
Yes very normal. This is completely normal. No need to fret. In fact Japan is still having aftershocks after the big one.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
Loading...