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Earthquakes

Earthquakes. Earthquakes. An earthquake is the shaking and trembling that results from the movement of rock beneath Earth’s surface. Not all earthquakes occur at plate boundaries. Sometimes they happen in the middle of a tectonic plate.

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Earthquakes

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  1. Earthquakes

  2. Earthquakes • An earthquake is the shaking and trembling that results from the movement of rock beneath Earth’s surface. • Not all earthquakes occur at plate boundaries. Sometimes they happen in the middle of a tectonic plate. • Earthquakes can happen both near the Earth’s surface or far below it.

  3. Earthquakes always begin in rock below the surface. • Most earthquakes begin in the lithosphere within 100 kilometers of the surface. • The focus is the point beneath Earth’s surface where rock that is under stress breaks, triggering an earthquake. • The point on the surface directly above the focus is called the epicenter.

  4. Seismic Waves • Seismic waves that travel through the Earth are called body waves. • Seismic waves are vibrations that travel through Earth carrying the energy released during an earthquake. • Seismic waves that travel along Earth’s surface are called surface waves. • Each type of seismic waves travels through Earth’s layers in a different way and at a different speed.

  5. Body Waves • There are two types of body waves: • P waves • S waves

  6. P-waves Click on picture to view animation after reading the notes • The first waves detected in an earthquake are p waves, or pressure waves. • P waves compress and expand the ground like an accordion. • P waves can travel through solids, liquids, or gases.

  7. S waves Click on picture to view animation after reading the notes • After P waves come secondary waves, or S waves. • S waves are earthquake waves that vibrate from side to side and thrust the ground up and down, or back and forth. • When S waves reach the surface, they shake structures violently. • S waves cannot move through liquids.

  8. Surface Waves • When P and S waves reach the surface, some of them are transformed into surface waves. • Surface waves move more slowly than P and S waves, but they produce the most severe ground movements. • They can actually make the ground roll like ocean waves. • Other surface waves shake the ground from side to side.

  9. All 3 waves Click on picture to view animation

  10. Detecting Seismic Waves Seismograph • Geologists use a seismograph to record and measure the vibrations of seismic waves. • When the waves reach a seismograph, the instruments creates a seismogram. • A seismogram is a tracing of earthquake motion. • Until recently, scientists used mechanical seismographs, like the one in the picture. Seismogram • Today they use electronic seismographs that convert ground movements into a signal that can be recorded and printed.

  11. Finding the Epicenter • One method they use is called the S-P Time Method. • They collect readings for the same earthquake from seismographs stations at different locations. • Scientists use seismograms to find the earthquakes epicenter. • They then use this data to determine the distance each station is from the earthquake. • They can then triangulate the results to find the epicenter. • It takes a minimum of 3 seismograph readings to find the epicenter of and earthquake.

  12. Richter Scale • Magnitude is a measurement of earthquake strength based on seismic waves and movement along faults. • There are many ways that scientists can measure an earthquake. • Charles Richter created the Richter magnitude scale in the 1930s to compare earthquakes by measuring ground motion and adjusting for distance to find their strength. • When magnitude increases by one unit the measured ground motion becomes 10 times larger on the Richter scale. • The Richter scale provides accurate measurements for small, nearby earthquakes, but the scale does not work well for large, or distant earthquakes.

  13. Mercalli Scale • Seismologists can also measure the intensity of an earthquake. • The Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale is used to measure the degree to which an earthquake is felt by people and the amount of damage done by it. • The Mercalli scale uses Roman numbers from I to XII to describe increasing earth quake intensity levels.

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