Not an engineer but… Land surveys would be the first step. Is the location fit for the bridge or tunnel? Tunnels would ideally not be built on a fault line or across a fault line if it is known to be active. As far as bridges- spacers get put in them to accommodate for expansion and shrinking due to temperature changes, that could accommodate some ground movement as well. And bridges generally have some amount of flexibility by design- in seismically active areas this would be an extra consideration.
Not an engineer but… Land surveys would be the first step. Is the location fit for the bridge or tunnel? Tunnels would ideally not be built on a fault line or across a fault line if it is known to be active. As far as bridges- spacers get put in them to accommodate for expansion and shrinking due to temperature changes, that could accommodate some ground movement as well. And bridges generally have some amount of flexibility by design- in seismically active areas this would be an extra consideration.
Not an engineer but… Land surveys would be the first step. Is the location fit for the bridge or tunnel? Tunnels would ideally not be built on a fault line or across a fault line if it is known to be active. As far as bridges- spacers get put in them to accommodate for expansion and shrinking due to temperature changes, that could accommodate some ground movement as well. And bridges generally have some amount of flexibility by design- in seismically active areas this would be an extra consideration.
Continents don’t drift like stretching taffy. They creak and judder and largely stay rigid, shifting along lines known as fault lines. And they don’t move smoothly – they stay still for years and then there’s an earthquake and they move a lot (like, several inches) in a short time.
You typically don’t build a bridge straight across a fault line. If you do, it falls down in the next earthquake. You certainly don’t do something as dumb as tunnelling across a fault.
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