1 / 30

What Are Earthquakes 5.1

What Are Earthquakes 5.1. Vocabulary to Know:. Seismology Seismologist Fault Plastic Deformation Elastic Deformation Elastic Rebound Transform Strike-slip fault Convergent Reverse fault Divergent Normal Fault Earthquake Zones Seismic Waves Body Waves Surface Waves P Waves

maitland
Download Presentation

What Are Earthquakes 5.1

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What Are Earthquakes 5.1 Vocabulary to Know: • Seismology • Seismologist • Fault • Plastic Deformation • Elastic Deformation • Elastic Rebound • Transform • Strike-slip fault • Convergent • Reverse fault • Divergent • Normal Fault • Earthquake Zones • Seismic Waves • Body Waves • Surface Waves • P Waves • S Waves

  2. Earthquakes

  3. Review • Lithosphere – outermost layer of earth • Made up of two parts • Crust and Upper Mantle • Lithosphere is also divided into pieces…. • Tectonic Plates

  4. Review • These pieces or tectonic plates move on top of the asthenosphere. • Tectonic plates are the pieces of Earth’s jigsaw puzzle • Boundaries are where • the pieces touch… • Convergent, Divergent, and Transform

  5. Study of Earthquakes • Seismology – the studying of earthquakes • Seismologists – scientists who study earthquakes • Most earthquakes take place near the edges of tectonic plates

  6. Where do earthquakes happen? • Ring of Fire- belt around the Pacific plate • 80% of all earthquakes occur here

  7. Faults • Tectonic plate movement can cause Faults • Fault – break in Earth’s crust • Blocks of the crust slide relative to one another • Earthquakes occur along faults because of the sliding San Andreas Fault

  8. What Causes Earthquakes • Stress • This happens when plates either pull, push, or slip past each other • Deformation – change in rock due to stress • Two ways… Plastic deformation (molded clay) or Elastic Deformation (stretching rubber band) • Elastic only leads to earthquakes

  9. Elastic Rebound • Sudden return of elastic deformed rock • Like a rubber band that snaps and returns to its unstretched shape. • Happens when their is too much stress for rock to withstand • Energy is released • Energy can travel as seismic waves • These waves cause earthquakes

  10. Real Picture of Before/After

  11. Faults at Tectonic Plate Boundaries Plate Motion Transform Convergent Divergent Major Fault Type Strike-slip fault Reverse fault Normal fault

  12. Normal Fault • Occur at divergent boundaries • Divergent boundary- • Plates drifting apart • Normal fault- • Block slides down relative to the surface • Vertical

  13. Reverse Fault • Occur at convergent boundaries • Convergent boundary- • Plates coming together • Reverse fault- • Block slides up relative to the surface • Vertical

  14. Strike-Slip Fault • Occur at transform boundaries • Transform boundary- • Plates slide past one another in different directions • Strike-slip fault- • Blocks slide in opposite directions • Horizontal

  15. Earthquake Zones • Earthquakes can happen near Earth’s surface or far below it • Most happen at Earthquake zones near tectonic plate boundaries • Earthquake zones have large number of faults • Example…California (San Andreas Fault)

  16. Earthquake Waves • Seismic - Waves that travel through Earth • Body waves – travel through earth’s interior • Two Types – P waves & S waves • Waves travel through Earth in different ways and speeds. Depends on material

  17. P Waves • Pressure Waves or Primary Waves • Travel through solids, liquids, and gases • First to be detected

  18. S Waves • Shear waves or Secondary waves • Second fastest • They shear rock from side to side (stretch it sideways) • Cannot travel through liquid

  19. Surface Waves • Move along Earth’s surface…duh right? • Only produce motion in upper portion of crust • Move slow but are more destructive • Two types: • Produce motion up, down, and around • Produce back and forth motion

  20. Earthquake Waves

  21. Measuring Earthquakes 5.2 and 5.3 • Vocabulary to Know: • Seismographs • Seismogram • Epicenter • Focus • S-P Time Method • Richter Magnitude Scale • Magnitude • Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale • Intensity • Retrofitting

  22. Locating Earthquakes • Seismographs – earthquake sensing instruments • At or near Earth’s surface • Seismograph create seismograms • Seismogram – tracing of earthquake motion

  23. Time and Location of Earthquakes • Compare seismograms noting differences in arrival times of P and S waves • Seismograms are used to find epicenter of Earthquake • Epicenter – point on Earth’s surface directly above Earthquakes starting point • Focus – inside Earth where Earthquake begins

  24. S-P Time Method • Used to find epicenter • Have to collect several seismograms of same earthquake from different locations • Placed on time distance graph • Done in Lab….

  25. The S-P time method… • How it’s used: • Collect several seismograms from different seismographs (at different locations) • Plot seismographs on a distance-time graph • Draw circles around the locations based on the distance-time graph • At the point where 3 lines intersect is the earthquake epicenter

  26. How do we find the Epicenter of an Earthquake?

  27. Richter Magnitude Scale • Richter Magnitude Scale (Richter Scale) – measures strength of Earthquakes • Measures groundmotion recorded by seismograms at seismograph stations

  28. Measuring Strength and Intensity • Magnitude - measure of Earthquakes strength • Each time magnitude increases it increases by one unit (10 times larger) • Example 5.0 earthquake ground motion is 10x larger than 4.0, but a 6.0 earthquake will produce 100x more ground motion than a 4.0.

  29. Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale • Measures Intensity – degree of which an earthquake is felt by people and the amount of damage it causes • Intensity values change due to location relative of epicenter.

  30. Earthquakes and Buildings • Retrofitting – process of making older structures more resistant to earthquakes • Earthquake resistance Technology -

More Related