Modern estimates, based on geological data, give the earthquake a magnitude of approximately 8.0 on the
moment magnitude scale and XI (catastrophic damage) on the
Mercalli scale, though more recent discoveries have shown that it was more likely 7.9. Shaking was felt strongly across the Weihe Basin region. The maximum
China seismic intensity was XI to XII occurring in Huaxian and Weinan. This would support the theory of the earthquake rupturing along the Huashan and Weinan faults. Intensity VIII was observed throughout the basin and the intensity X+ zone was long. Studies about the earthquake published between 1998 and 2017 presumed scarps along the Huashan and Weinan faults, some higher than , were produced by the 1556 earthquake. The fault zone is located northeast of
Xi'an. This normal fault generally trends east–west and dips to the north. A 1995 study said scarps along the Huashan Fault were high. Near the town of Huashan, the fault
terrace contained
Yangshao culture artifacts which were 4,000 years old. In a separate 1998 study, the fault scarps were about high. Scarps of the Weinan Fault are less detailed in published works with most focused around the
Chishui River area. Two studies in 1992 and 2010 estimated the fault scarps at and respectively. There has not been any research to confirm these scarps were produced by the earthquake or formed by multiple events. Assuming both faults ruptured during the earthquake, which runs for a total , the would be 7.0–7.5, according to empirical scaling relationships between magnitude and fault rupture length. This suggests previous values for the earthquake's magnitude were overestimated. ==Affected area==