Earthquakes occur when energy stored inside the Earth is suddenly released, causing the ground to shake. Most earthquakes are caused by the movement of large pieces of Earth’s outer shell called tectonic plates.
The main cause: movement along faults
The Earth’s crust is broken into several huge tectonic plates that slowly move over time. Where these plates meet, stress can build up for many years. When the stress becomes greater than the rocks can withstand, the rocks suddenly slip along a crack called a fault.
That sudden slip releases energy in the form of seismic waves, which travel through the Earth and cause shaking.
How an earthquake happens
- Tectonic plates slowly move.
- Rocks along a fault become locked together.
- Stress builds up over time.
- The rocks suddenly break or slip.
- Energy is released as seismic waves.
- The ground shakes — this is an earthquake.
Types of plate movement that cause earthquakes
1. Transform boundaries
Plates slide past each other horizontally.
Example: San Andreas Fault.
2. Convergent boundaries
Plates collide. One plate may be forced beneath another in a process called subduction.
These boundaries produce many of the world’s largest earthquakes.
3. Divergent boundaries
Plates move apart from each other.
Earthquakes here are usually smaller.
Other causes of earthquakes
Not all earthquakes are caused by plate tectonics. Smaller earthquakes can also result from:
- Volcanic activity — moving magma cracks surrounding rocks.
- Landslides — sudden ground movement.
- Mining activities — removal of underground rock.
- Reservoir-induced earthquakes — large dams changing pressure underground.
- Human activities such as deep fluid injection or geothermal operations.
Where do most earthquakes occur?
Most earthquakes happen along tectonic plate boundaries, especially around the Pacific Ring of Fire. This region includes parts of Japan, Indonesia, Chile, and the west coast of North America.
What are aftershocks?
After a major earthquake, the rocks continue adjusting to their new positions. This produces aftershocks, which are smaller earthquakes that can occur minutes, days, or even months later.
A simple example
Imagine bending a wooden stick. As you apply force, stress builds up. When the stick suddenly snaps, energy is released all at once.
Earthquakes occur in a similar way, except the breaking happens deep within Earth’s crust.
In one sentence
Earthquakes are caused by the sudden release of energy when rocks in Earth’s crust slip along faults, usually due to the movement of tectonic plates.
