Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - Does the earthquake have anything to do with the weather?

Does the earthquake have anything to do with the weather?

Because of the earthquake, the amount of dust in the air has greatly increased, and the heating effect of metal minerals in the geomagnetic crust makes the groundwater evaporate rapidly. That is to say, there should be a sultry weather before the earthquake, and the massive release of ground and underground energy after the earthquake has accelerated the saturation of water vapor in the sky. After the earthquake, many cracks appeared, and a large amount of heat in the earth was released, which also increased the ground temperature and strengthened evaporation. And make part of underground water vapor enter the air along the cracks, at the same time, the huge energy greatly increases the rising speed and height of this part of water vapor, and enters the high-altitude low-temperature area (the principle that large-scale forest fires eventually end in heavy rain is the same), thus forming a strong updraft on the ground. Air vibration can condense water vapor (the same principle was used in ancient times to drum for rain), and these water vapor and dust will condense into water or ice to disperse, so precipitation usually occurs after earthquakes.