Earthquake Notes Summary

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Various information about earthquakes with some examples of damage that they may create including the January 2010 Haitian Earthquake

Transcript of Earthquake Notes Summary

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1. What is an earthquake?2. What causes earthquakes?3. How are earthquakes measured? 4. What areas are more susceptible to

an earthquake? Why?5. What does an earthquake feel like?

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The earthquake that caused the most destruction in history occurred in the Shansi province of China on January 23,1556. An estimated 830,000 people were killed.

The second most destructive earthquake also occurred in China--in July, 1976--and killed 255,000 people.

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-900 -600 -300 -150 -70 -33 0

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The definition of an earthquake is… vibrations that cause the breaking of rocks.

These vibrations move in all directions through the earth. They begin at a point along a fault.

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The earth’s crust is constantly experiencing pressure from forces within and around it. This pressure builds up over time, and eventually causes the crust to break. This becomes a fault.

Let’s experience it…

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Faults are divided into three main groups:

Normal fault - when two plates are moving apart and one side of the fracture moves below the other; (caused by tension forces!)

Reverse fault - when two plates collide and one side of the fracture moves on top of another; (caused by compression forces!!)

Strike-slip or Lateral - when two plates slide past each other. (caused by shear forces!)

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An earthquake begins along a fault (a crack in the earth’s surface) at a point called the focus.

Directly above the focus is a point on the earth’s surface called the epicenter.

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FocusEpicenter

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Seismologists have stations all over the world that continuously collect information about earthquakes. This kind of information can help scientists figure out where larger, more destructive earthquakes may strike by mapping out the location of smaller ‘quakes. They also get a greater understanding of the changes the earth’s crust makes as the earthquakes occur.

How do they do this???

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When the fault ruptures with a sudden movement energy is released that has built up over the years. This energy is released in the form of vibrations called 'seismic waves'… earthquakes!

It is actually when these seismic waves reach the surface of the earth that most of the destruction occurs, which we associate with earthquakes.

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Earthquake Waves• Primary Wave (P-Wave) First set of waves

– Move side to side– FASTEST wave

• Secondary Wave (S-Wave) Second set of waves– Move up and down– Travel slow

• Surface Wave– Move up and down & side to side– MOST DANGEROUS– SLOWEST Wave

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Earthquakes can also cause landslides, sudden eruptions as in the case of a hot lava flow from a volcano or giant waves called tsunamis. Sometimes new land mass are also formed. Such earthquakes are attributed with the creation of the greatest undersea mountain range and the longest land mountain range.

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are needed to see this picture.

…And that was just a 7.2 on the Richter scale!

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Earthquakes are measured using the Richter Scale. The strongest earthquake ever measured was a 9.5 on the Richter Scale. This is a measurement of the amount of energy released from the earthquake.

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9.5 Chile, May 22, 19609.2 Indian Ocean (Sumatra tsunami) Dec 26,20049.2 Prince William Sound, Alaska, March 28, 19649.1 Andreanof Islands, Aleutian Islands, Pacific,

March 9, 19579.0 Kamchatka, Russia, November 4, 19528.8 Off the Coast of Ecuador, January 31, 19068.7 Rat Islands, Aleutian Islands, Pacific,

February 4, 19658.6 India-China Border, August 15, 19508.5 Kamchatka, Russia, February 3, 19238.5 Banda Sea, Indonesia, February 1, 19388.5 Kuril Islands, Pacific, October 13, 1963

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Magnitude is a number that characterizes the relative size of earthquakes & is proportional to energy released

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Mercalli Scale

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If an earthquake hit New Madrid

MercalliScaleDamage with a (new)New Madridearthquake

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Ohio’s Fault Lines

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Aftershocks are smaller earthquakes which occur in the same general area during the days to years following a larger event or "mainshock". As a general rule, aftershocks represent minor readjustments along the portion of a fault that slipped at the time of the main shock. The frequency of these aftershocks decreases with time.

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