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Earthquakes

Earthquakes. Chapter 8 & Then Some. Quiz. 1. Most Earthquakes occur along ________________. 2. The first seismic waves to arrive are______________. 3. The second seismic waves to arrive are _____________. 4. The last seismic waves to arrive are_______________.

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Earthquakes

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  1. Earthquakes Chapter 8 & Then Some

  2. Quiz • 1. Most Earthquakes occur along ________________. • 2. The first seismic waves to arrive are______________. • 3. The second seismic waves to arrive are _____________. • 4. The last seismic waves to arrive are_______________. • 5. Which seismic waves travel the fastest?___________ • 6. Which type of seismic wave can move through a solid, liquid or a gas?________________ • 7. Which seismic wave cannot travel through material that is completely liquid?______________ • 8. Which seismic waves are the slowest and the most destructive?_______________

  3. Where do Earthquakes occur? • Most earthquakes take place near the edges of tectonic plate. • Earthquakes occur along faults, where blocks of crust move.

  4. Earthquake Zones • Earthquakes can occur near the Earth’ssurface or far below the surface. • Most earthquakes occur at plateboundaries (in earthquake zones), but some happen at faults located in the middle of tectonic plates.

  5. Earthquake Locations Around the World

  6. Earthquakes in Alabama?! Surely, you’re kidding? How? Why?

  7. The New Madrid Fault • If there is no plate boundary in the middle of the United States, why do these earthquakes take place? • Geologists are beginning to understand the answer. The New Madrid Fault Zone is part of an ancient plate boundary. • In this area, the North American Plate tried to form a divergent plate boundary about 500 million years ago. The splitting stopped before new plates could form.

  8. The New Madrid Fault • The faults in the New Madrid Zone are remnants of this old event. Earthquakes occur because the North American Plate is still "settling down". • The faults in the New Madrid Zone do not reach the Earth’s surface. • They are buried beneath thousands of feet of rock and sediment deposited by the Mississippi River. • Geologists have located them by looking at the patterns of earthquakes in the zone.

  9. New Madrid Fault Several of the largest earthquakes ever recorded in the United States occurred in the Midwest, far from any plate boundary. These earthquakes took place in an area called the New Madrid Fault Zone, named after the town of New Madrid, Missouri.

  10. Alabama’s Earthquake Zone

  11. Earthquakes in Alabama • The last earthquake to occur in Alabama was on July 27, 2007. • It measured a 2.6 on the Richter scale. (A little stronger than the one crazed LSU fans caused in October 9,1988, when they defeated Auburn 7-6 for the SEC title. 80,000 people jumping up & down created surface waves, triggering an earthquake. Imagine that many people jumping up & down on a trampoline.) • This was not a very strong earthquake, but it was recorded by a seismograph, an instrument used to measure earthquakes.

  12. What Causes Earthquakes? • Caused by movement along faults (breaks in the Earth’s surface) • Rock deforms (changes) due to stress • Two types of deformation: • Plastic deformation: bending of rock; no earthquakes created • Elastic deformation: bending of rock until it breaks; causes earthquakes

  13. What is Elastic Rebound? • occurs when rock is suddenly returned to its undeformed (original) shape • Example: rubberband snapping back after being stretched • The rock will bend until enough forcecauses the rocks on either side of a fault to move and release energy. • Think of it as a rubber band being stretched to its limit and released—it snaps back.

  14. Elastic Rebound

  15. 3 Types of Faults Associated with Earthquakes

  16. Strike-Slip Fault occurs at a Transform Boundary

  17. Reverse Fault occurs at a Convergent Boundary

  18. Normal Faults occur at Divergent Boundaries

  19. Earthquakes and Faults Organizer: Draw the boundary on the plate motion side & the fault moving on the fault type side (label Hanging Wall & Foot Wall)

  20. Earthquake Energy: Just How Strong Was It Anyway? Earthquake Energy=Seismic Energy

  21. How do Earthquake Waves Travel? • Energy released from moving plates & faults travels through the Earth as waves. • Waves travel at different speeds & in different ways, depending on what kind of material they are moving through.

  22. Earthquake Energy This energy is called seismic energy and is measured in seismic waves: • Two types of seismic waves: • body waves • surface waves

  23. Body Waves: waves that travel through the Earth’s interior • There are two types of body waves: • P-waves • S-waves

  24. P and S wave comparison

  25. P-waves: primary waves or pressure waves • travel through solid, liquids and gases • fastest waves (travel 5-8 km/h), arrive first & are first ones to be detected • P-waves cause rock to squeeze and stretch. Imagine a slinky!

  26. P-Waves

  27. S-waves: secondary waves • second fastest waves; 2nd to arrive; shear waves • slower than P-waves; travel 3-5 km/h • S-waves move rock from side to side. • S-waves can’t travel through parts of the Earth that are completely liquid.

  28. S-Waves

  29. Surface Waves • move along the surface of the Earth • can move up, down & around or side to side • Surface waves move the slowest & cause the most destruction. • Think about it? Where do most people live: on the Earth’s crust or in it? Shouldn’t these waves be the most destructive since they occur where there is more stuff to destroy?

  30. Surface Waves

  31. Seismic Wave Arrival • First- P-waves • Second- S-waves • Third- Surface Waves

  32. Measuring Earthquakes Seismographs & Seismograms Wait aren’t those the same?

  33. Measuring Earthquakes • Seismographs: instruments used to sense earthquakes • Seismogram: tracing of earthquake movement made by seismograph • Seismologists use seismograms to locate earthquakes.

  34. Picture of a Seismograph

  35. Time and Location of Earthquakes • Seismologists use seismograms to find the epicenter of earthquakes: • the point on top of the Earth above the true center of an earthquake which is called the focus—it’s inside the Earth. (Also called the hypocenter.)

  36. Seismograms

  37. Measuring Earthquakes • Earthquakes are defined by their strength and depth, which is measured at the place the earthquake occurs. • 2 Scales are used to rank the quakes: • Richter Scale—measures magnitude • Mercalli Scale—measures intensity

  38. Earthquake strength & intensity • Richter scale: measures magnitude (think strength) of ground motion on a scale of 2.0-8.0 (numbers) • Mercalli scale: measures degree to which an earthquake is felt by people & amount of damage caused, which is known as intensity • Scale of I-XII (Roman Numerals)

  39. Reading Richter Scale Maps

  40. Reading Mercalli Scale Maps

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