User:Mikenorton/Earthquake notability guidelines

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Notability guidelines for earthquake articles on Wikipedia

The following list of criteria are intended to provide guidelines to help establish the notability of earthquake articles on Wikipedia, although they should not replace common sense. To be considered notable an earthquake would normally be expected to match one or preferably more of the criteria listed below

  • Magnitude
    greater than 7.0
  • Most 7+ earthquakes should meet additional criteria, although the largest will be notable solely because of their magnitude
  • Deep focus earthquakes
    of this magnitude are not necessarily notable
  • A swarm of events may be notable even if the individual events do not meet the magnitude or intensity criteria
  • European Macroseismic Scale, or 6.0 or greater on the Shindo scale
  • Deaths attributable directly to the earthquake (including any related tsunami) - i.e. not one heart attack that might have been caused by the 'quake
  • Of scientific interest - discussed in the scientific press at the time and in papers published afterwards
  • Unusually large events in areas of low seismicity - the 'largest earthquake since 1992' doesn't make it notable but the 'largest event since records began' probably does, as long as the area is large enough (i.e.countries rather than counties)
  • For some
    historical earthquakes
    , the interpretation put on them at the time e.g. a warning from god, and the effects it had on religious thought and philosophy, may make them notable despite not meeting any of the other criteria