Mechanical stress comes from the gradual movement of tectonic plates—massive pieces of crust and upper mantle that have drifted for billions of years—which can squeeze, stretch, or twist rocks. Once rocks experience stress beyond a critical point, they fracture and release energy built up while under stress.
Earthquakes originate at the focus or hypocenter, where energy is released in all directions as seismic waves. They are felt most intensely at the epicenter—the surface above the focus. Seismologists measure the size of an earthquake on the moment magnitude scale, where each whole-number increase, such as from 4.0 to 5.0, represents a 32-fold increase in released energy.
Analyzing these waves has allowed scientists to learn about Earth’s interior, identify tectonic plate boundaries, and develop warning systems for tsunamis.