Earthquake zone
The earthquake zone is also called a volcanic zone, and refers to a belt-shaped area where earthquakes and volcanic eruptions occur frequently. The Pacific Rim, the Alps-Himalaya Earthquake, and the Haeundae Earthquake. Earthquake-safe places are not on Earth, but there are areas that are particularly frequent. When you connect these areas, they form a band called a seismic zone. The world's most famous earthquake is the Pacific Rim Earthquake and the Alps Earthquake. The Pacific Rim earthquake is a ring of 80 percent of the earthquake in the world, connecting the western mountains of America to Alaska, Japan, the Philippines, and New Zealand. Earthquakes occur frequently because Japan is located in the Pacific Rim earthquake zone. Alps earthquakes pass through the Alps and the Himalayas and through Indonesia, where 15% of the world's earthquakes occur. Apart from these two earthquakes, small earthquakes are developing along the sea. The earthquake zone coincides with the boundary of the plate, where the energy in the earth is emitted to the surface.