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The Red Power of the East (Earth 4: The Relationship Between Earthquakes, Volcanoes and Water)

Earthquakes and volcanoes are both ways in which Earth's energy is released. The greatest human catastrophes on Earth are earthquakes and volcanoes. Earthquakes are caused by the squeezing of plates and plates on the earth, and the rapid rupture of the earth's surface crust after being forced to cause surface vibration or destruction is called earthquake. Volcanoes are also a disaster in nature. Volcanoes are the release of liquid energy from the core of the Earth's heart.

Earthquakes and volcanoes are natural phenomena. Because the Earth is dynamic. The Earth rotates, while also orbiting the Sun. A simple metaphor, like a person riding a car around our race oval 400-meter track, its speed is sometimes fast, sometimes slow, people in the car will have inertial sway, sometimes sideways body. (Because in reality, the car can not do self-rotation at the same time during the driving process, so you can only look at the passenger) If people rotate themselves in the car, one will be fast, one will be slow, and sometimes it will encounter wind and rain. In the process of swinging and rotating, various parts of the body will be squeezed and collided, and people will adjust their breathing according to their needs. If there are many people on the car gathered together, when squeezing and colliding, the surface of the body will change shape, and the inside of the body will also withstand more force. So for the Earth, earthquakes and volcanoes are the Earth's adjustment of breathing. In this parable, the automobile is the water of the earth, and man is the equivalent of the land on the earth.

Earthquakes and volcanoes are not the land's own separate actions. On Earth, land activities are inseparable from water and are closely related to water.

The spread of water is seen by the speed at which a drop of ink drops into the water. The fluctuations produced by water are also energetic. Fluctuations in water exacerbate volcanic and seismic eruptions, and it is known that water accounts for 70% of the earth's water. Land accounts for only 30 per cent. Water is dynamic (without considering the effects of the Earth's rotation and rotation on water, simply put) the pressure, buoyancy, tension, dynamics, erosion, and temperature of water. Numerous factors of water act on land, exacerbating the collisions between plates.

Water changes due to the tidal action of the Moon and the Sun on earth. Changes in water are also the result of the movement of matter and the exchange of energy inside and outside the Earth. The impact of water on Earth on earthquakes and volcanoes is also enormous. The fundamental reason for reducing earthquakes and volcanic eruptions lies in the study of water, the understanding of water, and the strengthening and maintenance of water stability.

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