Archive: https://archive.today/n9Bub
From the post:
>Earthquakes are violent events that alter the face of the planet. In many cases, those changes occur beneath the surface and only gradually become visible over thousands of years. Occasionally, however, an earthquake’s effects aren’t just felt—they’re seen. It’s even rarer to actually capture one of those moments on camera, but according to seismologists at Japan’s Kyoto University, the footage highlights the first-known video of a strike-slip fault. Their analysis, published in The Seismic Record, has led to new findings based on real-time visual evidence of tectonic motion.
Archive: https://archive.today/n9Bub
From the post:
>>Earthquakes are violent events that alter the face of the planet. In many cases, those changes occur beneath the surface and only gradually become visible over thousands of years. Occasionally, however, an earthquake’s effects aren’t just felt—they’re seen. It’s even rarer to actually capture one of those moments on camera, but according to seismologists at Japan’s Kyoto University, the footage highlights the first-known video of a strike-slip fault. Their analysis, published in The Seismic Record, has led to new findings based on real-time visual evidence of tectonic motion.
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