000 02015ngm a2200373 a 4500
005 20250918140526.0
007 vd cvaizu
008 110425s2009 at 050 s00 mleng d
020 _cRM1057.00
039 9 _a201108231032
_brosma
_y04-25-2011
_zfakrul
040 _aUKM
_erda
090 _advd QE534.3
_b.W489
245 0 0 _aWhy can't we predict earthquake?
_h[videorecording] /
_cproduced and directed by Mark Radice ; a BBC/Discovery Channel co-production.
264 1 _aFrenchs Forest, N.S.W. :
_bBBC Active,
_c2009
300 _a1 videodisc (50 min.) :
_bsd., col., ;
_c4 3/4 in.
336 _atwo-dimensional moving image
_2rdacontent
337 _acomputer
_2rdamedia
337 _avideo
_2rdamedia
338 _avideodisc
_2rdacarrier
500 _aOriginally broadcast as a segment of the television program: Horizon.
508 _aSeries producer, James van der Pool ; photography, Mike Robinson ; editor, Andrew Cohen.
511 0 _aNarrated by: Steven Mackintosh.
520 _aCapable of ripping up roads, moving mountains and tearing down towns, they're the biggest force of natural destruction on the planet. They affects parts of every continent. Billions of dollars, yen and yuan are being poured into researching these hazards. A major earthquake striking Los Angeles would cause over $200 billion in property damage. And yet, remarkably, when earthquakes hit, they invariably take us by surprise. This film asks the question that is bugging geologists, seismologists, town planners, big businesses and ordinary people alike, in seismic zones all over the globe; how can we predict an earthquake?
538 _advd format
650 0 _aEarthquakes.
650 0 _aEarthquake prediction.
700 1 _aRadice, Mark,
_eproduction,
_edirection
907 _a.b15016110
_b2021-12-01
_c2019-11-12
942 _c5
_n0
_kdvd QE534.3 .W489
914 _avtls003463859
990 _armh
991 _aFakulti Sains Teknologi
998 _at
_b2011-12-04
_cm
_dg
_feng
_gat
_y0
_z.b15016110
999 _c486334
_d486334