UNIT
6
EARTHQUAKES AND FAULTS
    PREPARED BY: JANICE T. FRANCISCO
  “The world as we
 have created it is a
    process of our
thinking. It cannot be
  changed without
    changing our
       thinking”
  -ALBERT EINSTEIN
The earthquake that caused the most
destruction in history occurred in the
Shansi province of China on January
23,1556. An estimated
The second most destructive
earthquake also occurred in China--
in July, 1976--and
  RELATIONSHIP                     LESSON
 BETWEEN FAULTS
AND EARTHQUAKES
PREPARED BY: JANICE T. FRANCISCO
                                    1
Earthquake
 •Sudden shaking of the
 ground that we feel when
 rock layers of Earth
 suddenly slip past one
 another to a new position
 •Violent ground-shaking
 phenomenon caused by
 the sudden release of
 strain energy stored in
 rocks
•One of the most catastrophic
and devastating hazards
The simplest definition of an earthquake
is… vibrations that cause the breaking of
rocks.
BASIC DEFINITIONS
  •FAULT: A surface or
   narrow zone along which
   one side has moved
   relative to the other.
  • Faults are classified
   based upon their
   direction of movement.
    FAULTS
• A fault is any surface or zone
  in the Earth across which
  measurable slip (shear
  displacement) develops.
• Faults are fractures on which
  slip develops primarily by
  brittle deformation processes.
    FAULTS
• Fault zone is a brittle structure
  in which loss of cohesion and
  slip occurs on several faults
  within a band of definable
  width.
• Shear zone: occurs at depth
  without definable
  displacement on the surface
STRESS, FAULTS, AND FOLDS
Deformation is the bending, tilting, and
breaking of the Earth’s crust. Plate tectonics
is the major cause of crustal deformation.
Thicker and
heavier crust
sink deeper
into the
mantle
where
thinner and
lighter crust
will rise
higher on the
mantle.
There are 3 basic kinds of stress that the
isostatic adjustment causes, compression,
tension, and shearing.
Compression occurs when crustal rocks
are squeezed together.
Tension is the force that pulls
rocks apart. Here rocks tend
to become thinner.
Shearing pushes rocks in opposite directions.
Sheared rocks bend, twist and break.
The results of stress are folding and
faulting.
When a rock has stress put on it and does not
break it is called folding. Folds appear as
wave-like structures in rock layers. Some folds
are small and can be seen in individual rocks
and some folds are huge and can only be
seen from the air.
The 3 general types of folds are
anticlines, which are upcurved folds
where the oldest rock layers are in the
center,
synclines which are downcurved fold in
which the youngest layers are in the
center
and monoclines in which both ends stay
horizontal but one side is lower than the
other.
Rocks don’t always bend, sometimes
they break. When the rock moves and
breaks it is called a fault.
There are several different kinds of
faults. There are two sides to a fault.
The side that is above the fault plane is
called the hanging wall.
                         Hanging Wall
When the hanging wall moves down it is
called a normal fault. Normal faults
occur in places where there is tension or
the rocks are being pulled apart.
When the hanging wall moves up it is
called a reverse fault. Reverse faults are
caused by compressional forces.
A low angle reverse fault is called a
thrust fault because one side is being
thrust onto the other.
The last type of faults are called strike-
slip faults. Strike-slip faults slide
horizontally past one another.
If you are looking across to the other side of a strike-
slip fault and that side moves to the left of you it is
called a left lateral strike-slip fault. Strike-slip faults
occur in and around transform plate boundaries
like where we live near the San Andreas fault. This is
also where shearing takes place.
Epicenter   Focus