FACTBOX - Five facts about earthquakes and magnitude
(Reuters) - An earthquake with a magnitude of 5.2 shook parts of Britain on Wednesday, but officials said there were no reports of anyone being killed or serious damage.
Here are some facts about measuring strength of earthquakes:
* Magnitude measures the size of an earthquake by the energy released at the source of the quake, and is determined from readings on seismographs.
Richter-type formulas, the most commonly used, read the frequency and amplitude of the seismic waves, which are vibrations from earthquakes.
* The Richter scale was named after seismologist Charles Richter, who first developed this method of measuring quakes in 1935.
The scale is logarithmic. Each whole number step in the magnitude scale corresponds to the release of about 31 times more energy than the amount associated with the preceding whole number value. So a magnitude 7.0 quake releases about 900 times more energy than a magnitude 5.0 tremor.
The scale is also open-ended. A quake of magnitude 2 is usually said to be the smallest normally felt by humans.
* The largest recorded earthquake occurred in Chile on May 22, 1960. It measured 9.5 and triggered a tsunami that swept across the Pacific Ocean, killing scores of people in Hawaii, Japan and elsewhere.
The quake that triggered the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami was magnitude 9.15. Continued...
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