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On the other hand, intensity is a measure of
the felt or perceived effects of an earthquake rather than the strength of
the earthquake itself. It is a measure of how severe the shaking was at a
particular location. Thus, whereas magnitude refers to the force of the
earthquake as a whole (i.e., an earthquake can have just one magnitude),
intensity refers to the effects of an earthquake at a particular site. The
intensity is usually strongest close to the epicenter and is weaker the
farther a site is from the epicenter. Intensity is determined by classifying
the degree of shaking severity as measured by an intensity scale. The
intensity is assigned for a particular location on the basis of the visible
consequences left by the earthquake and from subjective reports by people
who experience the shaking. There are many intensity scales in use today
around the world. The most commonly used scale for intensity in the United
States is the Modified Mercalli (MM) scale, a 12-point scale that ranges
from barely perceptible earthquakes at MM I to near total destruction at MM
XII (Table 8--3).
The intensity of an earthquake is more germane to its public health
consequences than its magnitude. Intensity scales also allow comparisons
with earthquakes that occurred before the development of seismic monitoring
instruments. The destruction that an earthquake causes is a function of its
intensity and the resistance of structures to seismic damage. |