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Measuring. Earthquakes. Inside Earth Chapter 2.2 Pages 64-70. Fault. A break in Earth’s lithosphere ( crust ) where plates slide or move past each other. Focus. Focus : the starting point of an earthquake , usually underground Depth of the focus is related to the type of boundary.
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Measuring Earthquakes Inside Earth Chapter 2.2 Pages 64-70
Fault • A break in Earth’s lithosphere (crust) where plates slide or move past each other.
Focus • Focus: the starting point of an earthquake, usually underground • Depth of the focus is related to the type of boundary. • Transform: Shallow <300m • Divergent: 300m • Subduction: Deep 700m
Epicenter • The point directly above the focus on the surface of the Earth is called the Epicenter.
Seismic Waves • Vibrations caused by the energy of the earthquake that travel through the Earth’s interior and across the surface away from the focus • P-Waves • S-Waves • Surface Waves
Primary Waves • First Wave to Arrive • Squeeze and stretch rock, (Accordion-like) • Compression / tension stress • Passes through… • Solid rock • Magma • Ocean water • Air • Everything!
Secondary Waves • Arrive second, after P-waves • Vibrate from side to side, up and down • Shake the ground back and forth • Can not pass through liquids or gasses • Indicates that Earth has a liquid outer core.
Surface Waves • Travel along the Earth’s surface • Produced by P and S waves that reach the surface • Produce severe ground movement • Most damaging waves.
Seismograph • An instrument used to detect and record the seismic waves produced by earthquakes.
Seismograph • Consists of a heavy weight attached to a frame by a wire. • A pen is attached to a heavy weight. • The pen stays in place, the drum moves during an earthquake.
Seismogram • The record sheet the pen records on as the drum rotates.
Seismograph • More than 10,000 Stations Use Data to… • Determine an epicenter • Need 3 Stations • Earthquake Magnitude
Locating an Epicenter r • Need 3 Seismograph stations to determine their distance from the epicenter • Determine distance by: D = S-wave arrival time - P-wave arrival time.
Locating an Epicenter • Each station draws a circle. • Where all three intersect is the epicenter.
Magnitude • The measure of the amount of energy released in an earthquake • Three types • Mercalli • Richter Scale • Moment Magnitude.
Mercalli Scale • 12 steps describe how earthquakes effect people, buildings, and the surface • Rates earthquakes according to damage dealt to people and structures • Not a precise measurement.
Richter Scale • Developed in the 1930’s by Charles Richter • Rates the size of the seismic waves. • Measures the intensity of ground movements • Provides accurate measurements for small, nearby earthquakes, but does not work well for large or distant.
Moment Magnitude Total Energy MM = • Indicates the total energy released during earthquake’s more accurately • Scale used by scientists • Can be used for any size earthquake, near or far.
Moment Magnitude • Combines the following to determine the moment magnitude: • The typeof seismic waves produced and their strength • How much movement occurred on the fault • Strength of the rocks that broke • 5.0 Little damage • Above 5.0 major damage
The point under the surface directly where the Earthquake originates is… A. Fault B.Seismic Waves C. Earth’s Crust D. Focus E. Epicenter
The point on the surface above where the Earthquake originates. A. Fault B.Seismic Waves C. Earth’s Crust D. Focus E. Epicenter
The wave that arrives first is the… A. Secondary Wave B.Seismic Waves C. Sound Wave D. Primary Wave E. Tsunami Wave
The scale that measures the total energy released is the… A. Richter Scale B.Mecallie Scale C. Bathroom Scale D. Moment Magnitude E. Magnitude
How many seismograph stations are needed to locate an earthquake? A. 5 B.3 C. 1 D. 6 E. 4
What to Work On • Read textbook pages 64-69 • Answer the Section Review questions on page 69 (#’s 1-4) DUE: Friday, October 21st
Locating an Epicenter Lab • Purpose: Geologists who study earthquakes are called seismologists. If you were a seismologist, you would receive data from all across the country. Within minutes after an earthquake, seismographs located in Denver, Houston, and Miami would record the times of arrival of the P waves and S waves. You would use this data to zero in on the exact location of the earthquake’s epicenter.
Locating an Epicenter Lab • Seismograph Data:
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