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GEOL: CHAPTER 8. Earthquakes and Earth’s Interior. Learning Outcomes. LO1: Explain Elastic Rebound Theory LO2: Describe seismology LO3: Identify where earthquakes occur, and how often LO4: Identify different seismic waves LO5: Discuss how earthquakes are located. Learning Outcomes, cont.
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GEOL: CHAPTER 8 Earthquakes and Earth’s Interior
Learning Outcomes LO1: Explain Elastic Rebound Theory LO2: Describe seismology LO3: Identify where earthquakes occur, and how often LO4: Identify different seismic waves LO5: Discuss how earthquakes are located
Learning Outcomes, cont. LO6: Explain how the strength of an earthquake is measured LO7: Describe the destructive effects of earthquakes LO8: Discuss earthquake prediction methods LO9: Discuss earthquake control methods
Learning Outcomes, cont. LO10: Describe Earth's interior LO11: Examine Earth's core LO12: Examine Earth's mantle LO13: Describe Earth's internal heat LO14: Examine earth's crust
Earth’s Interior • Crust • Mantle • Outer core • Inner core
Seismic Waves and Earth’s Interior • P-wave and S-wave velocity determined by density and elasticity of material • S-waves don’t travel through liquids • Seismic waves change velocity and direction when enter material with different density or elasticity (refraction)
Seismic Waves and Earth’s Interior, cont. • Some waves are reflected • Calculate depths of boundaries • Discontinuity: significant change in materials or their properties
The Core • P-wave velocity decreases at a depth of 2,900 km: core-mantle discontinuity • P-wave shadow zone • Weak P-wave energy does penetrate the shadow zone: from solid inner core • S-wave shadow zone: shows the outer core is liquid, because S-waves can’t travel through liquids
Core Density and Composition • 16.4% Earth volume • ~33% of mass • Outer core: 9.9 to 12.2 g/cm3 • Earth center: pressure 3.5 million times of surface • Outer core: iron, sulfur, silicon, oxygen, nickel, potassium • Inner core: iron and nickel
Earth’s Mantle • Moho: discontinuity about 30 km deep • Asthenosphere: • 100-250 km deep • P- and S-waves slow down • Plastic • Magma generation • Lithospheric plates ride across it • 3.3 to 5.7 g/cm3; probably periodotite
Earth’s Internal Heat • Geothermal gradient: 25ºC/km • Greater in active volcanic regions • Most heat generated by radioactive decay • Regions of equilibrium temperature • Base of crust: 800ºC to 1200ºC • Core-mantle boundary: 2,500ºC -5,000ºC
Continental Crust • Granitic composition • 2.5 to 3.0 g/cm3; average = 2.7 g/cm3 • 20 to 90 km thick; average = 35 km thick • Thickest under large mountain ranges
Oceanic Crust • Gabbro overlain by basalt • Average density = 3.0 g/cm3 • 5-10 km thick • Thinnest at spreading ridges