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Earthquakes

Explore the nature of earthquakes, their occurrence at plate boundaries and faults, and the specific case of the New Madrid Fault Zone. Learn about the different types of faults, seismic waves, and how earthquakes are measured. Discover the relationship between volcanic eruptions and earthquakes.

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Earthquakes

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  1. Earthquakes

  2. Lesson 1: What are earthquakes and where do they occur

  3. Where do Earthquakes Occur? • Earthquakes can occur near the Earth’s surface or far below the surface. • Most earthquakes occur at plate boundaries, but some happen at faults located in the middle of tectonic plates.

  4. PLATE BOUNDARIES

  5. Earthquake Locations Around the World

  6. What Causes Earthquakes? • Earthquakes are caused bymovement along faults. • When stress is placed on rocks it deforms, or changes. • Rock is stretched and bent until it can no longer take the stress. • When enough stress builds up in the rock it, it slips and energy is released. • This energy is felt as an earthquake.

  7. Earthquakes in St Louis?? • Do we live near a plate boundary? • Do we live near a fault?

  8. The New Madrid Fault • If there is no plate boundary in the middle of the United States, why did 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. 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. 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. New Madrid Fault • Over a three-month period in the winter of 1811 to 1812, the New Madrid Fault Zone was struck by three huge earthquakes estimated to be greater than magnitude 8.0 • The New Madrid Fault is what causes Alabama to experience earthquakes.

  11. 3 Types of Faults associated with Earthquakes

  12. Strike-Slip Fault occurs at a Transform Boundary

  13. Reverse Fault occurs at a Convergent Boundary

  14. Normal Faults occur at Divergent Boundaries

  15. How do Earthquake Waves Travel? • Energy released from moving plates and faults travels through the Earth as waves. • These waves are called seismic waves.

  16. Types of Seismic Waves 1. BODY WAVES: Seismic waves that travel through the Earth. 2. SURFACE WAVES: Seismic waves that travel along the surface. • WAVES TRAVEL: 1.At different speeds and 2 In different ways Depending on what kind of material they are moving through.

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

  18. 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?_______________

  19. Seismograph • A seismograph is an instrument used by scientists to measure earthquakes. • Seismologists who study earthquakes can determinewhen an earthquake started by noting the arrival times of P-waves and S-waves. • A seismograph records vibrations in the Earth and determines the strength and location of an earthquake. Ancient Chinese Seismograph. The ball would drop from the dragon to the frog. It told the people which direction the earthquake come from.

  20. Seismograms 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Time in Minutes 1. How many minutes did it take for the P-Waves to arrive? 2. How many minutes did it take for the S-waves to arrive? 3. How long did the surface waves last?

  21. Epicenter • The epicenter is the point on the Earth’s surface directly above an earthquake’s starting point.

  22. Focus • The focus is the point inside the Earth where the earthquake begins. • The epicenter is located directly above the focus.

  23. Vents Volcanoes form around vents that release magma onto the Earth’s surface. Lava Magma chamber

  24. The Composition of Magma Determines whether it is explosive or not! • High water content • More likely to be !!! • High content • More likely to be !!! • Why? • Silica has a thick, stiff consistency • Flows slowly • Tends to Harden in the volcano’s vent water EXPLOSIVE silica EXPLOSIVE

  25. Quiz Part 2 a. What physical event causes explosive eruptions? b. Would high water content increase the likelihood of having an explosive eruption? c. Would high silica content increase the likelihood of having an explosive eruption?

  26. What Erupts from a Volcano? Blocky lava Lava can be thick or thin. Pahoehoe Aa Pillow lava

  27. Types of Volcanoes Shield volcano Cinder cone volcano Composite volcano

  28. What causes volcanoes? The Formation of Magma • Mantle rock melts when the temperature increases or the pressure decreases.

  29. What causes volcanoes? Where Volcanoes Form • Tectonic Plate Boundaries!!! ~75% world’s active volcanoes in Ring of Fire

  30. What causes volcanoes?

  31. What causes volcanoes? Hot Spots

  32. How do volcanologists predict eruptions? • Measuring Small Quakes • Before eruption, increase in number & intensity • Measuring Slope • Bulges may form with magma (tiltmeter) • Measuring Volcanic Gases • Outflow of volcanic gases • Sulfur dioxide, carbon dioxide • Measuring Temperature from Orbit • Measure changes in temperature over time

  33. You should not be a Volcanologist if…. • You don’t like hiking, backpacking, rock climbing, etc. • You are not interested in experiencing extreme temperatures and heights. • If you don’t like to travel to incredible places and see breathtaking views of the world. Robert McGimsey USGS A. Ozerov

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