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Seismograms and Earthquake Hunting

Seismograms and Earthquake Hunting. 1. Body Waves: P and S waves. P or primary waves fastest waves travel through solids, liquids, or gases compressional wave , material movement is in the same direction as wave movement S or secondary waves slower than P waves travel through solids only

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Seismograms and Earthquake Hunting

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  1. Seismograms and Earthquake Hunting

  2. 1. Body Waves: P and S waves • P or primary waves • fastest waves • travel through solids, liquids, or gases • compressional wave, material movement is in the same direction as wave movement • S or secondary waves • slower than P waves • travel through solids only • shear waves - move material perpendicular to wave movement

  3. 2. Seismometer • A seismometer is an instrument used to record vibrations in the Earth’s crust. • The graph that shows the vibrations is called a seismogram. • The seismometer must be able to move with the vibrations, yet part of it must remain nearly stationary. • *Most modern seismometers are computerized

  4. 3. Seismograms • Provides information: • P wave arrival • S wave arrival • S-P interval • Amplitudes of each wave • What can be taken from this: • Distance of earthquake from seismograph • Magnitude of earthquake

  5. 4. How is an Earthquake’s Epicenter Located? • Time-distance graph showing the average travel times for P- and S-waves. • The farther away a seismograph is from the focus of an earthquake, the longer the interval between the arrivals of the P- and S- waves

  6. 5. Nomogram …Amplitude Decreases As Distance Increases… But Magnitude stays the same!! (M=5.5)

  7. 6. How is an Earthquake’s Epicenter Located? • Three seismograph stations are needed to locate the epicenter of an earthquake • A circle where the radius equals the distance to the epicenter is drawn • The intersection of the circles locates the epicenter

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