Answer:
I'd say Eastern because most of them are found in Europe.
The answer is: the 1906 San Francisco earthquake.
From an examination of the displacement of the ground surface which accompanied the 1906 earthquake, Henry Fielding Reid, Professor of Geology at Johns Hopkins University, concluded that the earthquake must have involved an "elastic rebound" of previously stored elastic stress.
The elastic rebound theory is an explanation for how energy is spread during earthquakes. As rocks on opposite sides of a fault are subjected to force and shift, they accumulate energy and slowly deform until their internal strength is exceeded.
It causes a lot but not all
Standards for weights and measures and the legal system were put in place..
<span>B.
Lava, ash, and other materials from volcanic eruptions gradually build up over time. This is the correct answer. The volcanic molten material is ejected from fissures or initial cones and as the lava flows out and cools and as the pyroclastic materials solidify and tumble down the slopes, they build up the flanks of the volcanoes.</span>