curprev02:1502:15, 6 April 2024 TomS TDotOtalkcontribs 31,243 bytes+11 Just to be precise, a magnitude scale can use any base of logarithms, either base 10, common (or decimal) logarithms; or base e, natural logarithms; or even, as is the case of magnitude (astronomy) base of about 2.512…undoTags: Mobile editMobile web editAdvanced mobile edit
curprev04:1404:14, 3 January 2024 103.201.135.171talk 31,178 bytes+3 Fixed grammar mistake Changed: is a measure of the strength of the earthquakes TO: is used to measure the strength of earthquakesundoTags: RevertedMobile editMobile web edit
curprev03:2703:27, 20 November 2023 ProudFarmerScholartalkcontribs 31,171 bytes+10 Corrected an inconsistency of the scale's logarithmic nature found later in the article. This correction in the introduction emphasizes that the scale measures the amplitude of the seismic waves, not the strength.undo