A security camera in Myanmar captured something scientists have never seen before on film: the surface of the Earth lunging sideways during a magnitude 7.7 earthquake.In 1.3 seconds, the ground shifted 2.5 meters (a little over 8 feet), revealing something researchers have only been able to model or guess at until now. It’s the first direct video of a fault line in motion, offering a rare, horrifyingly calm glimpse at the forces that shape continents and rearrange cities.Scientists used pixel cross-correlation analysis to study the video frame by frame. What they found was a pulse-like rupture, where seismic energy bursts along a fault line in one concentrated hit instead of a drawn-out slide. This type of rupture has long been suspected, but was nearly impossible to observe in real time.Another strange detail stood out. The land didn’t slip in a straight line. It curved. That movement matched scratch-like marks seen in rock formations called slickenlines, which geologists have used as fossilized proof of ancient fault behavior. This footage gave those old scars a modern reference point. It confirmed that the curved slip patterns predicted by seismic models really happen, and that they move in the direction scientists had theorized for decades.First-Time Ever Footage Shows the Ground Slip 2.5 Meters in Just 1.3 Seconds During EarthquakeResearchers say this footage could help verify the behavior of historic earthquakes, including the massive 1717 rupture along New Zealand’s Alpine Fault. Until now, most of that work relied on computer modeling, geological evidence, and a lot of assumptions.Now we have proof, caught by accident on a single camera in the middle of a disaster. A shaky feed from one small town just rewrote what textbooks can say about fault movement.There’s already talk of placing more cameras near high-risk zones, which could change how we understand earthquake physics entirely. With enough visual evidence, we could start decoding how ruptures begin, how they travel, and what kinds of signals happen before the ground suddenly slips beneath our feet and devastates cities.The Myanmar footage only lasts a few seconds. But in that short time, the planet showed exactly how fast and violent it can be when the tension finally breaks.The post Earthquake Causes 2.5-Meter Ground Slip in First-Ever Footage appeared first on VICE.