Quoth blas
View Post
The plate on top can get snagged on the plate going down and get pulled down with it causing huge amounts of stress on the upper plate. When the pressure is enough, it can snap back into place. Not only is this a tremendous amount of energy being released it will push water up (subduction zones are usually under water) causing a huge tsunami. No one knows how tall the initial wave was in the 2004 earthquake / tsunami but it is believed that the actual land "snapped" up over 30 feet.
Also, most earthquakes don't happen in one place (the epicenter) - as stress is released in one section it continues along the fault line (like a crack in ice) and will go along the fault until the friction of the land can contain the energy (a.k.a all the energy is spent). If there's friction holding the land back from moving, then there will be earthquakes.
The San Andreas fault is actually two plates moving side by side. The plates moving themselves won't cause the earthquakes - it's when the stress builds up but doesn't get expelled due to friction.
Edit: 4.9 aftershock just hit Haiti (in the past hour).
Edit 2: You can now go to maps.google.com (Google Maps) and with the satellite view you can see the destruction. It wasn't like this a few days ago so they must have updated it recently.



)

Comment