From what i know, ground shakes all over the place all the time, but it is so insignificant level, that we are unable to even notice it.
Should be probably „significant ground shakes that can causes destruction“ or something
myDuderinos on
I live in one of the yellow ares and can’t remember to ever have felt an earhquake.
Got curious and tried to look up when the last earthquake in the region was – and well apparently in a 100km radius of my location there were a total of 36 earthquakes in the last 30 days. But the strongest was a 1.7 so nothing you can really feel
Red area. There were a couple earthquakes i remember but only one that i personaly felt. I had an exam in our faculty building on 4th floor and when it started i felt like i was moving a whole meter to the side for a couple of seconds. The exam got canceled and we had to come again the next day. It was i think 3 years ago.
A_Dehydrated_Walrus on
„The Euope“, lol.
Proschain on
damn what did Bucharest do?
grownask on
Are Turkey and Greece so affected because of the encounter of different tectonic plates?
gaggzi on
It’s not map porn if source is missing, its map gore. Why aren’t posts like this removed?
NaKaMamessifan on
I live in sometimes and have never felt an earthquake, not that there aren’t any. I once lived on the 9th floor when 5.6 earthquake struck and slept right through it. Apparently half the building evacuated.
Aetylus on
So this is another crappy made-for-clicks map.
It is very likely a simplification of the GEM (Global Earthquake Model) Foundation Seismic Hazard Map.
The GEM map is not only a beautiful and detailed map, embedded in a pleasing UI, it is also the culmination of humanity’s knowledge about our planets seismicity in one place. If you delve into thier data, you’ll see the full host of original source information.
If you like maps, check out the GEM version, not this slop.
Forgiz on
How come most of Italy shakes, but isle of Corsica does not?
TonninStiflat on
The ground shakes in Finland on avwrage once a week.
Not that anyone notices those small ones.
Ok_Falcon4830 on
Is this map about earthquakes or orgasms?
NationalUnrest on
Ah yes, I always cross the border to France when it starts shaking in Belgium, just to be safe!
OkCampaign9454 on
Let me go to greece!!!
Robcobes on
there’s an frequent earthquake zone in the north east of The Netherlands. it’s human caused earthquakes, but still.
Curmadgeon on
We Greeks have big earthquakes (Like in Samos 7.0 magnitude 2020 or in Zante 7.1 magnitude 2018) but nobody remembers because we have good buildings. Turkey on the other hand, everybody remembers. This is the difference when you build buildings right. Italy has the same problem as Turkey.
Conquersmurf on
The north of the Netherlands (Groningen) experience many small earthquakes due to extraction of natural gas.
GlassSpider21 on
The increased activity in Wales is entirely down to Tom Jones
Space_Narwal on
Groningen (north of Netherlands) also had earthquakes
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fuck bucharest in particular i guess
From what i know, ground shakes all over the place all the time, but it is so insignificant level, that we are unable to even notice it.
Should be probably „significant ground shakes that can causes destruction“ or something
I live in one of the yellow ares and can’t remember to ever have felt an earhquake.
Got curious and tried to look up when the last earthquake in the region was – and well apparently in a 100km radius of my location there were a total of 36 earthquakes in the last 30 days. But the strongest was a 1.7 so nothing you can really feel
Kinda cool how Sardinia and Corsica is green
I think some people from [Groningen (a province in the north of The Netherlands)](https://www.knmi.nl/nederland-nu/seismologie/aardbevingen) might want to have a word.
I expected that Iceland had frequent tremors.
Red area. There were a couple earthquakes i remember but only one that i personaly felt. I had an exam in our faculty building on 4th floor and when it started i felt like i was moving a whole meter to the side for a couple of seconds. The exam got canceled and we had to come again the next day. It was i think 3 years ago.
„The Euope“, lol.
damn what did Bucharest do?
Are Turkey and Greece so affected because of the encounter of different tectonic plates?
It’s not map porn if source is missing, its map gore. Why aren’t posts like this removed?
I live in sometimes and have never felt an earthquake, not that there aren’t any. I once lived on the 9th floor when 5.6 earthquake struck and slept right through it. Apparently half the building evacuated.
So this is another crappy made-for-clicks map.
It is very likely a simplification of the GEM (Global Earthquake Model) Foundation Seismic Hazard Map.
You can find a zoomable version of the original GEM map here: [https://maps.openquake.org/map/global-seismic-hazard-map/#4/42.88/10.40](https://maps.openquake.org/map/global-seismic-hazard-map/#4/42.88/10.40)
The GEM map is not only a beautiful and detailed map, embedded in a pleasing UI, it is also the culmination of humanity’s knowledge about our planets seismicity in one place. If you delve into thier data, you’ll see the full host of original source information.
If you like maps, check out the GEM version, not this slop.
How come most of Italy shakes, but isle of Corsica does not?
The ground shakes in Finland on avwrage once a week.
Not that anyone notices those small ones.
Is this map about earthquakes or orgasms?
Ah yes, I always cross the border to France when it starts shaking in Belgium, just to be safe!
Let me go to greece!!!
there’s an frequent earthquake zone in the north east of The Netherlands. it’s human caused earthquakes, but still.
We Greeks have big earthquakes (Like in Samos 7.0 magnitude 2020 or in Zante 7.1 magnitude 2018) but nobody remembers because we have good buildings. Turkey on the other hand, everybody remembers. This is the difference when you build buildings right. Italy has the same problem as Turkey.
The north of the Netherlands (Groningen) experience many small earthquakes due to extraction of natural gas.
The increased activity in Wales is entirely down to Tom Jones
Groningen (north of Netherlands) also had earthquakes