If you go by peak ground acceleration, then the northridge quake wins for 1994. Was there and shit was insane.
One_Bison_5139 on
It’s insane how powerful the 2004 Earthquake was
token-black-dude on
Maybe don’t go to Indonesia for the summer?
Numerous_Recording87 on
Are the circles scaled properly? The magnitudes are logarithmic.
crewcumber on
I love the style of graph, it’s refreshing to see. If I might suggest an improvement, it would be making the x and the y axis labelling in white colour too against the green background. Otherwise very nice design!
Kobosil on
wow there wasn’t a earthquake with higher than 8.4 magnitude for 12 years
ixikei on
Yay for a trend in the right direction over the last decade! This implies that the quakes should soon stop.
jvin248 on
Do an overlay of the Sunspot cycle tracking. Appears higher earthquake trends happen at “solar maximum” where more sunspots appear due to the sun’s activity (it flips magnetic poles every 11 years).
This is one my favorite earthquake visuals, showing the total energy released. Remember that earthquake events are on a logarithmic scale, so the ‘total energy’ of quakes is dominated by a few massive events.
Mid_Atlantic_Lad on
I’m hoping the PNW doesn’t become this decades “big one.” We are not ready for one at all, since the last megathrust happened back in 1700 and is only recorded in trees and oral history.
Our infrastructure is about as prepared for earthquakes as Texas is for blizzards. That one in 1700 was potentially as high as 9.2, and the Tsunami wiped out natives all along the coast and river.
15 Comments
If you go by peak ground acceleration, then the northridge quake wins for 1994. Was there and shit was insane.
It’s insane how powerful the 2004 Earthquake was
Maybe don’t go to Indonesia for the summer?
Are the circles scaled properly? The magnitudes are logarithmic.
I love the style of graph, it’s refreshing to see. If I might suggest an improvement, it would be making the x and the y axis labelling in white colour too against the green background. Otherwise very nice design!
wow there wasn’t a earthquake with higher than 8.4 magnitude for 12 years
Yay for a trend in the right direction over the last decade! This implies that the quakes should soon stop.
Do an overlay of the Sunspot cycle tracking. Appears higher earthquake trends happen at “solar maximum” where more sunspots appear due to the sun’s activity (it flips magnetic poles every 11 years).
We are currently in a “solar maximum” cycle.
.
Missing April 3, 2024 in Taiwan. 7.4.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_Hualien_earthquake
Edit: after reading other comments, seems that the thread title is misleading. The data shown is the strongest earthquake of each year.
Decade is 10 years, not 12.
Crazy that the Christchurch earthquake caused so much damage and it wouldn’t even make it onto the chart
Great visualization! Did you notice any trends or patterns in the locations or frequencies of these strong earthquakes over the past 35 years?
it’s refreshing to finally see a set of world data that isn’t being affected by global warming. lol
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1960_Valdivia_earthquake#/media/File:Graph_of_largest_earthquakes_1906-2005.png](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1960_Valdivia_earthquake#/media/File:Graph_of_largest_earthquakes_1906-2005.png)
This is one my favorite earthquake visuals, showing the total energy released. Remember that earthquake events are on a logarithmic scale, so the ‘total energy’ of quakes is dominated by a few massive events.
I’m hoping the PNW doesn’t become this decades “big one.” We are not ready for one at all, since the last megathrust happened back in 1700 and is only recorded in trees and oral history.
Our infrastructure is about as prepared for earthquakes as Texas is for blizzards. That one in 1700 was potentially as high as 9.2, and the Tsunami wiped out natives all along the coast and river.