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The Richter scale, developed by the American geologist Charles Richter in the 1930s, is a "logarithmic" scale, which means that each one-point increase on the scale represents a tenfold increase in the magnitude of the earthquake.
The Richter scale, developed by the American geologist Charles Richter in the 1930s, is a logarithmic scale, which means that each one-point increase on the scale represents a tenfold increase in the magnitude of the earthquake.
EarthScope Consortium on X: VIDEO (00:05:39) - Moment Magnitude Explained—What Happened to the Richter Scale? #earthquake / X
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Moment Magnitude Explained—What Happened to the Richter Scale?