Standard 8-3.
EARTHQUAKES
    Essential Question
• WHAT CAUSES
EARTHQUAKES AND
WHERE DO THEY
HAPPEN?
         INTRODUCTION
• http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/p
  layer/environment/environment-natural-
  disasters/earthquakes/earthquake-101.html
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.
The definition of an earthquake is…
 vibrations caused by the breaking or slipping of rocks
___________________________________
__________________________________.
                             all directions
These vibrations move in __________
___________ through the earth. They
                             fault
begin at a point along a _____________.
               Earthquakes
• _____________
      force
                    and _________________
                                  stresses
  (8-3.7– tension, compression, and shearing)
  along faults can build up as blocks of rock
  are pushed (compression or shearing) or
  pulled apart (tension). If the _____________
                                         pressure
  or stress becomes too great, the rock breaks
  at a weak point along the fault and
  _________________
            energy
                         is released
                      Earthquakes
        earthquakes
• ____________________ are vibrations produced
                                    fault
  when rocks break along a ___________.           The term
  earthquake describes the sudden slip on a fault
  and includes the ground shaking and radiating
        seismic
  ______________________          that is caused by the
  slip. ______________________,
                Volcanic Activity         or other
  geologic processes, may cause stress changes in
  the earth that can also result in an earthquake.
The earth’s crust is constantly
experiencing pressure from forces
within and around it. This pressure
builds up over time, and eventually
             crust to break
causes the ____________________.    This
             fault
becomes a ______________.
Let’s experience it…
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
____________________ - when two plates slide
past each other. (caused by shear forces!)
Three Types of Faults
 Strike-Slip
                        Reverse
                        Normal
                                 fault
An earthquake begins along a ________
(a crack in the earth’s surface) at a point
                focus
called the _____________.
Directly above the focus is a point on
the earth’s surface called the
  epicenter
______________.
Epicenter   Focus
  seismologist
____________________ 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???
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.
        Parts of the Earthquake
• The energy spreads outward in all directions as
  vibrations called ______________________.
                       seismic waves
• The ____________
              focus    of the earthquake is the point
  in the crust, or mantle, where energy is released.
• The _______________
          epicenter         is the point on Earth’s
  surface directly above the focus; energy that
  reaches the surface is greatest at this point.
Focus –    point inside the Earth where an
           earthquake begins
Epicenter – point on Earth’s surface above focus
Focus, Epicenter, and Fault
   WHAT CAUSES EARTHQUAKES?
• Used to describe both sudden slip on a fault,
  and the resulting ground shaking and radiated
  seismic energy caused by the slip
• Caused by ___________________________,
                 volcanic or magmatic activity
• Caused by other sudden ________________
                                      stress changes in the earth
  _________________________________.
        What causes earthquakes?
• __________________move
        Tectonic plates
                               past each other
  causing stress. Stress causes the rock to
  deform
http://www.uwgb.edu/dutchs/EarthSC-102VisualsIndex.HTM
What Causes an Earthquake?
Cause of Earthquakes
 ◆ Aftershocks and Foreshocks
           aftershock
   • An ________________      is a small earthquake
     that follows the main earthquake.
            foreshock
   • A _______________     is a small earthquake that
     often precedes a major earthquake.
                                   landslides
Earthquakes can also cause ______________,          sudden
eruptions as in the case of a hot lava flow from a
    eruptions
______________                                tsunamis
                   or giant waves called ______________.
Sometimes new land mass are also formed. Such
earthquakes are attributed with the creation of the
              undersea
greatest _________________     mountain range and the
longest land mountain range.
      Landslides & Tsunamis
• http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/1
  01-videos/landslides
• http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/1
  01-videos/tsunami-101
…And that was
just a 7.2 on
the Richter
scale!                 QuickTime™ and a
                       GIF decompressor
                are needed to see this picture.
Focus, Epicenter, and Fault
                Earthquake Hazard Potential Map
Parkfield, CA
“Earthquake Capital of the World”
       Where Do Earthquakes Occur and How Often?
      80% of all earthquakes
~_________________________occur in the circum-Pacific belt
   – most of these result from convergent margin activity
   – ~15% occur in the Mediterranean-Asiatic belt
   – remaining 5% occur in the interiors of plates and on
     spreading ridge centers
   – more than 150,000 quakes strong enough to be felt are
     recorded each year
              Review!!!
• http://www.iknowthat.com/mhscience/Earth
  quakes/Fixed.htm
• http://www.iknowthat.com/mhscience/Earth
  quakes/earthquake_movie.html
Focus and Epicenter of Earthquake
        SEISMIC WAVES
      seismic waves
• ______________________ are waves
  generated by an earthquake that travel
  through the Earth. These waves can cause
  the ground to move forward, backward,
  up, down, and even to ripple. Seismic
  Waves are generated at the _____________
                               same
  time but move in different ways, and at
  different speeds.
 Seismic
Waves in
the Earth
       http://www.uwgb.edu/dutchs/EarthSC-102VisualsIndex.HTM
3 TYPES OF SEISMIC WAVES
• ____________
    primary
                (P) WAVES
• _____________
     secondary   (S) WAVES
• ___________
      surface  WAVES
              CONSIDERED AS BODY WAVES
Seismic Waves
8.2 Measuring Earthquakes
Earthquake Waves
 ◆ _______________
     body waves
   • Identified as P waves or S waves
       P waves
   • _______________
                push-pull
     - Are _______________       waves that push
       (compress) and pull (expand) in the direction
       that the waves travel
     - Travel through solids, liquids, and gases
     - Have the greatest velocity of all
       earthquake waves
        PRIMARY (P) WAVE
• Move ________
           out         from the earthquake focus,
  the point where the energy is released
• Travel the __________
                   fastest       of the three waves
• Move through ________solid      and ___________
                                          liquid
  layers of Earth (it also can move in gas)
• Push and pull rock creating a back-and-
  forth motion in the direction the wave is
  moving (______________________)
               longitudinal wave
 Primary Waves (P Waves)
• A type of seismic wave that compresses
  and expands the ground
• The first wave to arrive at an
  earthquake
           http://daphne.meccahosting.com/~a0000e89/insideearth2.htm
8.2 Measuring Earthquakes
Earthquake Waves
 ◆ Body Waves
        S waves
  • _________________
     - Seismic waves that travel along Earth’s outer
        layer
     - Shake particles at right angles to the direction
       that they travel
    - Travel only through solids
    - Slower velocity than P waves
 ◆ A seismogram shows all three types of
   seismic waves—surface waves, P
   waves, and S waves.
Secondary Waves (S Waves)
•   Move out from the earthquake focus
•   Move ___________
             out
                                than primary waves
•   Can only move through ___________   solid         rock
•   Move at _______________to
                 right angles                 primary
    waves causing rocks to move up and down
                              transverse wave
    and side to side (_____________________)
 Secondary Waves (S Waves)
• A type of seismic wave that moves the
  ground up and down or side to side
         http://daphne.meccahosting.com/~a0000e89/insideearth2.htm
Body Waves: P and S waves
                  • Body 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
Comparing Seismic Waves
          SURFACE WAVES
• Form when ______________________________
• Can cause the ground to shake making rock sway
  from side to side and roll like an ocean wave
• These waves cause the most destruction
• They move back and forth and in a rolling motion
  along the surface
• They ___________________________________
             Surface Waves: R and L waves
• Surface Waves
   – Travel just below or along the ground’s surface
   – Slower than body waves; rolling and side-to-side
     movement
         Especially damaging to buildings
   – ______________________________
                  Surface Waves
• Move along the __________________
                   Earths surface
• Produces motion in the upper crust
  – Motion can be up and down
  – Motion can be around
  – Motion can be back and forth
• Travel more __________
                slowly   than S and P waves
• More destructive
Seismic Waves Paths Through the Earth
Earth’s Interior Showing
  P and S Wave Paths
• Scientists use the principle that the ________ speed
  and ____________
          direction    of a seismic wave
  depends on the material it travels through.
  Because of the behavior of these different
  waves, scientists have _________________
                              indirect evidence
  for the solid inner core and liquid outer core
  of Earth; because earthquake waves travel
  faster through the _____________
                          mantle
                                                than
  through the crust, scientists know that the
  mantle is denser than the crust.
Earthquake Waves & Earth’s Interior
Primary or
“P” Wave
Secondary
or “S”
Wave
           Measuring Earthquakes
• The movement of materials in the ________ outer
                                                       core
  (which is a liquid) of the Earth is inferred to be the
  cause of Earth’s ___________________.
                        magnetic field               A
  ____________________will
        compass needle
                                      align with the lines of
  force of Earth’s magnetic field. ___________
                                            iron         and
  _________
    nickel       are metals that easily magnetize, and
  are inferred to be the metals in Earth’s core.
      Measuring Earthquakes
• The energy spreads outward in all directions as
  vibrations called __________________.
                        Seismic Waves           Seismic
  waves can be measured and recorded by a
  _____________________.
       ____seismograph_______.
• ____________________
        __Seismographs______     are instruments or a
  device that detects and records seismic or
  earthquake waves. It measures the vertical ground
  motion and the horizontal ground motions (N-S/E-
  W). It also traces wave shapes onto paper and
  translates waves into an electronic signal.
      Measuring Earthquakes
• The vibration record, called a ______________,
                                       seismogram
  looks like jagged lines on paper. ______________
                                         Seismograms
  are traces of amplified, electronically recorded
  ground motion made by seismographs.
• Measuring the time between the arrival of the P
  and S waves determines the _____________
                                   distance
  between the recording seismograph and the
  earthquake epicenter.
  Measuring Earthquakes
Earthquake Waves
 ◆ ________________
         Seismographs   are instruments that
   record earthquake waves.
 ◆ ________________
        Seismograms     are traces of
   amplified, electronically recorded ground
   motion made by seismographs.
Seismograph
Types of Seismographs
Seismogram Printout
Seismic wave behavior
– P waves arrive first, then S waves, then L and R
      How speeds
– Average   is an Earthquake’s
                    for all these Epicenter Located?
                                  waves is known
– After an earthquake, the difference in arrival times at a
  seismograph station can be used to calculate the
  distance from the seismograph to the epicenter.
Determining the location of an earthquake
First, distance to earthquake is determined.
1. Seismographs record seismic waves
     2. From seismograph record called the seismogram, measure time delay
         between P & S wave arrival
     3. Use travel time curve to determine distance to earthquake as function
         of P-S time delay
Now we know distance waves traveled, but we don't know the direction from
which they came.
We must repeat the activity for each of at least three (3) stations to
triangulate a point (epicenter of quake).
Plot a circle around seismograph location; radius of circle is the distance to the
quake.
Quake occurred somewhere along that circle.
Do the same thing for at least 3 seismograph stations; circles intersect at
   epicenter. Thus, point is triangulated and epicenter is located.
Locating an Earthquake
        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
Time-Travel Curve
               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
 Locating an Earthquake Epicenter
• ___________________
         Triangulate
                          means to use three
  positions to determine an exact location.
          What is Triangulation?
• _____________________
            Triangulation     identifies the
  epicenter of an earthquake. The location of an
  earthquake’s epicenter is found by plotting
  circles on a map from the records of three
  seismograph stations and finding the point
  where the three circles intersect.
• _____________________
          Triangulation
                              is the process of
  determining the location of a point by
  measuring angles to it from known points at
  either end of a fixed baseline, rather than
  measuring distances to the point directly.
Locating Earthquakes
http://www.uwgb.edu/dutchs/EarthSC-102VisualsIndex.HTM
Locating Earthquakes
http://www.uwgb.edu/dutchs/EarthSC-102VisualsIndex.HTM
 Locating Earthquakes
http://www.uwgb.edu/dutchs/EarthSC-102VisualsIndex.HTM
Triangulation
of 3 stations
to locate
earthquake
epicenter
How do scientists calculate how far a location is
from the epicenter of an earthquake?
    • Scientists calculate the difference
      between arrival times of the
      ____________________________
             P waves and S waves
    • The further away an earthquake is, the
      greater the time between the arrival of
      the P waves and the S waves
Earthquakes are measured using the
    the Richter scale
_______________________.    The strongest
   Scale.
earthquake ever measured was a ______
                                  9.5   on the
Richter Scale. This is a measurement of the
amount of energy released from the
earthquake.
8.2 Measuring Earthquakes
Measuring Earthquakes
 ◆ Historically, scientists have used two
   different types of measurements to
   describe the size of an earthquake
   —______________
          —intensity              magnitude.
                          and ______________.
 ◆ Richter Scale
   • Based on the amplitude of the largest seismic
      wave
   • The _Richter Scale expresses the magnitude of
     an Earthquake and measures the
     _______________________.
         energy released.         The scale goes
     from _____________.
             1-10
             How are the Size and Strength of an Earthquake
                               Measured?
• Magnitude
      Richter scale
  – ___________________
      measures total amount
    ___________________
      of energy released by
    ___________________
      an earthquake;
      independent of
    __________________;
    independent of
    intensity
  – Amplitude of the
    largest wave produced
    by an event is
    corrected for distance
    and assigned a value
    on an open-ended
    logarithmic scale
Determining the magnitude of an earthquake
______________
      Magnitude    -- measure of energy released during
  earthquake.
There are several different ways to measure magnitude.
Most common magnitude measure is ___________________,
                                       Richter Scale,
  named for the renowned seismologist, Charles Richter.
Richter Magnitude
• Measure amplitude of ________________
                           largest S wave   on seismograph
  record.
• Take into account distance between seismograph &
  epicenter.
Intensity
      Intensity
• ______________ refers to the amount of damage done in
  an earthquake
How are the Size and Strength of an Earthquake
                  Measured?
                                • ______________
                                      Intensity
                                   – subjective
                                     measure of the
                                     kind of
                                     damage done
                                     and people’s
                                     reactions to it
 •   Modified Mercalli Intensity Map
      – 1994 Northridge, CA earthquake,
        magnitude 6.7
How are Earthquakes Measured? Richter
                Scale
9.5   Chile, May 22, 1960
9.2   Indian Ocean (Sumatra tsunami) Dec 26,2004
9.2   Prince William Sound, Alaska, March 28, 1964
9.1   Andreanof Islands, Aleutian Islands, Pacific,
             March 9, 1957
9.0   Kamchatka, Russia, November 4, 1952
8.8   Off the Coast of Ecuador, January 31, 1906
8.7   Rat Islands, Aleutian Islands, Pacific,
      February 4, 1965
8.6   India-China Border, August 15, 1950
8.5   Kamchatka, Russia, February 3, 1923
8.5   Banda Sea, Indonesia, February 1, 1938
8.5   Kuril Islands, Pacific, October 13, 1963
    Earthquake Waves (Review)
       Primary wave (P waves)
• _________________________     First set of waves
   – Move side to side
   – FASTEST wave
       Secondary wave( S waves)
• __________________________     Second set of
  waves
   – Move up and down
   – Travel slow
• __________________
      Surface Wave
   – Move up and down & side to side
   – MOST DANGEROUS
   – SLOWEST Wave