Will Earthquakes Stop If I Walk Less?

Deepali Saxena
3 min readSep 12, 2020

Have you been wondering if the number of earthquakes has increased in recent months, or loosely since the beginning of coronavirus-led lockdowns? And does this increase has something to do with our restricted movement?

Let’s dive into what is actually happening.

Our earth is made up of many pieces — called tectonic plates — which keep slowly moving around but are stuck at their edges (plate boundaries) due to friction. An earthquake is what happens when two of such pieces of earth suddenly slip past one another, overcoming the friction that held them together. This leads to a release of energy, which radiates in all directions in the form of waves called seismic waves. These waves reach the surface of the earth and make the ground shake.

There are human-induced earthquakes too, which are caused by activities like, extraction of mining products, groundwater, oil, and gas. They are also caused by building reservoirs behind dams which leads to increased fluid pressure on the surface of the earth. Other activities include explosions from underground bombs, nuclear tests, or injecting fluids back to the earth, also known as fracking.

But what about our daily activities, like getting up, walking, driving a car, traveling by train, or taking a bus. Do these activities also contribute to an earthquake?

The answer is NO.

The daily activities which humans perform also cause small vibrations that lead to anthropogenic seismic noises, but these are not responsible for earthquakes.

Now you must be wondering, why suddenly we are hearing more news about earthquakes than any other year?

Well, I have to say, some of it is psychological, some responsibility of media and Godly search-engine Google, which use your data to show personalized content, while the rest may be only because you started to read more to cope up with lockdown boredom.

Let’s walk over some figures.

According to the Earthquake Catalogue of the United States Geological Survey (USGS), the number of quakes with a magnitude of more than 4.5, in a specific time frame is tabulated below:

Reacting to this data, Celeste Labedz, a PhD student at the California Institute of Technology Seismological Laboratory, says, “All earthquakes are at a totally normal level…nothing different this year than any other year for earthquakes.”

“If you’re trying to write a story on earthquakes being different this year, THEY ARE NOT. That would be a very boring story”, she jokes.

On being asked if this is a marginal drop in the earthquake rate, Labedz says, “it is a random distribution, sometimes there are a little bit more earthquakes, sometimes less.”

This leads us to our conclusion that daily human activities or changes in behavioral patterns due to COVID-19 lockdowns are not responsible for the occurrence of any earthquakes.

Further, the USGS website says, “The increasing number of earthquakes in recent years is not because there are more earthquakes, but because there are more seismic instruments and they are able to record more earthquakes.”

It adds, “as a result of the improvements in communications and the increased interest in natural disasters, the public now learns about earthquakes more quickly than ever before.”

Image Source: Science Focus

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Deepali Saxena

An engineer at mind, and a journalist at heart, Deepali finds austerity and reticence impressive, falls for poetry, and takes pride in being an SRK fan.