Title: ESS 8 Final Review
1ESS 8 Final Review
- Book all chapters.
- Appendices
- A quakes in world
- B quakes in US
- C Mercalli intensity scale
- Quiz p.356 in Bolts book
- Glossary
- WWW pages
2Map of major plates
Press, 20-3
3Some facts
- There are 10 to 15 major plates
- The US is split, mostly on the North American
Plate, but a western sliver on the Pacific Plate - The boundaries between plates are faults
- but most faults are not plate boundaries
- Earthquakes are essentially the moving plates
rubbing together
4Plates are not continents
- And continental boundaries usually are not plate
boundaries - For example, east coast of US is far from the
edge of the North American plate - Continental lithosphere lighter silicates
- Oceanic lithosphere heavier basaltic rocks
(olivine, pyroxene and plagioclase feldspar rich
in iron, magnesium, calcium and aluminium)
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6Plate boundaries
- Divergent - plates pull apart Mantle material
rises to fill the space between the separating
plates. - Example Pacific Atlantic Indian oceanic ridges
- Lot of small earthquakes, shallow.
- Convergent - plates collide One plate get
pushed down while the other stays on top. - Example Pacific rim subduction zones
- Lot of earthquakes, any magn. Down to 600km
depth. - Transform - plate rub against each other Both
plates stay on surface and move sideways. - Example San Andreas transform fault
- A lot of small events, some major ones, shallow
(20km)
7Mid-ocean ridge
Press, 20-4a
8Rift valley
Press, 20-4b
9Normal fault - divergence
Press, 18-12a,b
10Oceanic crust over oceanic crust
Press, 20-6b
11Continental crust over oceanic crust
Press, 20-6a
12Continental collision
Press, 20-6c
13Thrust fault - convergence
Press, 18-12a,c
14Transform boundary
Press, 10-22
15Strike-slip fault - transform
Left-lateral
Press, 18-12a,d
16Other ways to deform rock
Press, 10-6
17Convection
- Heat a liquid from below, cool it on top
- Cooler material is more dense
- Hotter material is less dense
- So the cool stuff on top sinks, and the warms
stuff on the bottom rises - The liquid continually overturns, like a pot on a
stove - Convection is tending to make everything have a
more similar temperature
18Convection in action
- Water on stove Tectonic plates on mantle
Press, 1-13a, 1-14a
19Core, mantle, and crust
Press, 1-6c
20Some facts
- Tectonic plates move 0 to 20 cm/year
- This is about 25 miles per million years
- The mantle is moving at similar velocities
- It takes about 100 million years for the mantle
to overturn - The outer core is a liquid, and it is also
convecting, but much faster, creating the Earths
magnetic field
21Where are quakes?
- Mostly near plate boundaries Interplate
- Greatest number at subduction zones
- But also plenty at ridges and transform zones
- A few near hot spots Intraplate
- Well discuss with volcanoes
- Some anomalies in US, also intraplate
- Failed rift - New Madrid
- Unloading after ice age? East coast
22Earthquakes Mgt5, 1963-1988
Keller, 1-5
23Why dont quakes extend deeper?
- Deeper in the Earth, it is hotter
- There is also more pressure, variations in
composition, and changes in crystal structure,
but these dont matter as much - If material is within a few hundred degrees of
its melting temperature, it quietly flows rather
than suddenly cracks in an earthquake
24Tectonics of western N. Am.
- Pacific and North America are big plates
- Juan de Fuca, Cocos are smaller plates
- Mix of transform, ridge, and subduction
boundaries - Location of boundaries has evolved over past 30 My
25US and Mexico coast
- Three little plates subducting offshore Oregon,
Washington, and B. Columbia - Juan de Fuca Plate
- Gorda Plate
- Explorer Plate
- Transform fault San Andreas Fault CA.
- Spreading ridge splitting Gulf of California
- Oblique because ridges are combined with
transform faults - Cocos Plate subducting to the south
26N.Am.map
USGS Prof. Paper, 1-2
27Why do we believePlate Tectonics?
- Evidence that Atlantic ocean was once closed
- Same rocks fossils on matching coasts
- East and west Atlantic coasts line up
- Age dating of seafloor rocks
- Other evidence for motion of plates
- Magnetic lineaments on oceanic crust
- Earthquakes focal mechanisms, glacial signs
- Now, we can record plate motion directly
28History of plate tectonics
- 1660 - Francis Bacon, and probably many others,
noticed similarity in coastlines, no idea what it
meant - 1912 Alfred Wegener noticed coastal fit and
fossil and rock similarities, but very few others
believe the theory (convection lacking) - 1960s magnetic stripes, seafloor spreading and
earthquake distributions convince scientific
community
29Supercontinents
- Pangaea is name for supercontinent that existed
about 200 Mya - All major continents, N. America near equator
- Gondwana is name for supercontinent at about 750
Mya - S. America, Africa, India, Antarctica, Australia
- Near South Pole
- Joined by rest of continents about 300-200 Mya gt
Pangaea - Supercontinent cycle of 500 Mya
30More supercontinents
- Rodinia
- 1200 - 700 Mya
- Involved most continents
- But in different configuration than Pangaea
- Probably still more earlier supercontinents
- Age of the earth 4.5 billion years
- Age of the universe 15 billion years.
31Liquids versus Solids
- Liquids flow viscosity h resists.
- Solids deform elasticity G resists.
- Maxwell characteristic time t h/G
- h is viscosity coefficient and G is elastic
modulus - t 10-12 seconds for water
- t 106 years for earth crust
- Time scale of deformation lt t gt solid
- Time scale of deformation gt t gt liquid
- See experiment with silly-putty
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33The earthquake cycle
- Before Loading After quake
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35Strain accumulation
- Steady strain rate over many years
- Distributed across zone about 100 km wide
- Only top 20 km build strain in California
- Deeper rocks seem to flow due to higher temp.
- We see strain accumulate with GPS
- Global Positioning System
- If steady, no clues of coming quakes
36Elastic Rebound
- After 100 years of accumulating strain
old road
new road
37Elastic Rebound
old road
new road
38Elastic Rebound
- Deformation during the earthquake cycle
time 0 yrs
width of deformed zone set by thickness of crust
time 100 yrs
after earthquake!
39Maximum size of quakes
- Subduction zones
- Some bigger than M9
- 1960 Chile quake was 9.5
- 1964 Alaska quake was 9.2
- Larger volume with cold rock
- Bigger cracks, thus larger magnitudes
- Transform and ridge quakes
- Biggest quakes we have seen are M8
- San Francisco 1906 was 7.9
- Most are smaller than M7
40Magnitudes and fault rupture sizes
- Magnitude 8 500 km
- Magnitude 7 70 km
- Magnitude 6 10 km
- Magnitude 5 1.5 km
- Magnitude 4 200 m
- Magnitude 3 30 m
- Magnitude 2 4 m
41How faults break
- Rupture begins
- place on fault at that time closest to breaking
- Spreads outward over fault surface from focus
- At about 3 km/sec (near shear-wave velocity)
- Vslip 1m/s ltlt Vrupture 3 km/s lt Vsurface lt VS lt
VP - Larger area implies larger magnitude, and longer
duration of rupture earthquake
42Vocabulary
- Focus - point where the rupture started
- Hypocenter - location and time of quake beginning
- Epicenter - surface projection of hypocenter
- No clear pattern as to where hypocenter is on the
fault plane - Rupture - the sliding of one side of the fault
against the other side
43Epicenter and hypocenter
Tarbuck 6-3
44Measuring earthquake size
- 1. Intensity
- Some famous old quakes
- 2. Magnitude
- 3. Seismic moment
- Some notable recent quakes
45Local or Richter magnitude
- If seismograph not 100 km from epicenter
- ML log10 (A) C(D) where
- A is the maximum seismic wave amplitude in
microns (10-6 m) recorded on a standard
seismograph - C is a correction factor that is a function of
distance D from the seismograph to the epicenter
P
S
surface
A
46Types of Magnitude
- ML - Local or Richter magnitude
- Original magnitude, developed by Charles Richter
in 1930s - uses S wave recorded within 300 km of epicenter
- mb - Body-wave magnitude
- uses P wave
- MS - Surface wave magnitude
- uses surface wave
- MW - Moment magnitude
- uses seismic moment
47Definition of Seismic Moment
- M0 ? S D F D seismic moment
- Units are force-length, Newton-meters
- Varies over many orders of magnitude
- ? is the rigidity of the rock
- D is the amount of slip or offset between the two
sides of the fault - S is the surface area that ruptured
- MW (2/3)(log M0) - 6.0 is now replacing other
magnitude scales, such as Richter magnitude or
surface wave magnitude, because it provides a
consistent measure of size of earthquakes from
the smallest microtremors to the greatest
earthquakes ever recorded
48Rule of Thumb
- On average a magnitude m1 earthquake has
- 10 times greater peak amplitude of shaking than a
magnitude m earthquake - 30 times greater energy and moment release
- 3 (6-7) longer duration of slip for small (large)
49P waves
- Longitudinal - material moves back and forth
(vibrates) in same direction that wave travels,
produces compression/dilatation cycle - Fastest type of wave, so arrives first
- termed Primary wave
- Typical velocities in crust 5 - 7 km/sec
- Travels through solids or fluids
50S waves
- Shearing - material moves back and forth
perpendicular to the direction the wave travels
in a twisting motion - Slower than P wave, arrives second
- termed Secondary wave
- Typical velocities in crust 3-5 km/sec
- Travels through solids, but not fluids
- because there is no restoring force for the
perpendicular motions
51Surface Waves
- Two types
- Love waves
- Rayleigh waves
- Travel a bit slower than S waves
- Largest amplitude waves
- Need a surface to travel along, which is the
rock-air interface at the Earths surface - Motion is strongest near the surface
- Most strongly generated by earthquakes near the
surface - Technically, have the names of Love and Rayleigh
waves
52 S wave
shadow
53ReviewProfile ofthe Earth
54Crust, Mantle, and Core
- Crust is thin veneer floating on mantle ,Rigid
plates - Layer of lighter composition than mantle (2.7
g/cc ), - Moho (Mohorovicic) is boundary between crust and
mantle - Thickness mapped by seismic work
- Thinner under oceans (4-6 km)
- Thicker under continents (25-80 km)
- Mantle is most of Earths mass, dense rock (3.3
g/cc) - Slowly flowing in convection
- Several phase changes in upper mantle
- Deeper rock is denser and stiffer due to
increasing pressure - Cores radius is about half of Earths radius
- Outer core is liquid iron (85), Convection leads
to magnetic field - Lower P velocity than mantle and no S waves
allowed in liquid! - Inner core is solid iron
- Inner core grows as outer core freezes Because
Earth is cooling
55Bigger magnitudemore fault area, more offset
9.2
9.5
Kovach, p. 47
56Global counts of quakes
Rough numbers per year 2000 with M near 5 180
with M near 6 17 with M near 7 2 with M near
7.9 0.25 with M near 8.6
Note, there are several kinds of magnitudes and
we havent defined bins precisely
Kovach, p. 46
57Gutenberg-Richter power law distribution
Log N a - b Mw
7.3
6.7
8
Mw (2/3) log M0 -6.0
58Aftershocks
- smaller earthquakes following the largest
earthquake of a sequence (the mainshock) near
mainshock rupture zone - follow almost all shallow earthquakes
- cover ruptured area
- can number in thousands
- can last for years or decades
- aftershocks of Northridge M 6.7 are still
occurring
59Aftershocks
Seismicity rate in South California, 1987-2000
- non-stationary seismicity rate
- increase of the seismicity rate after large
earthquakes aftershocks
60Numbers of aftershocks
- Northridge 13,523 aftershocks in 1994-1996
- Landers 65,380 aftershocks in 1992-1996
- 22 with M gt 5.0
- Most were M1 or 2
- There were many more too small to detect
61Distribution of sizes
- As for mainshocks, there are many more small
aftershocks in a sequence than big aftershocks - If mainshock has M 6
- 1 or 2 aftershocks with M 5 to 6
- 10s of M 4 to 5
- If mainshock has M 8, an M 7 aftershock is likely
62Probability of quake
- Find the faults
- Estimate how faults are segmented
- How does each segment behave
- Size of its quakes
- Time between quakes - recurrence interval
- Sum up risk from all segments of all faults
- (This exercise tells how much shaking)
- Then figure out expected damage
63Fault zone segmentation
- Characteristic earthquake model
- Only one segment breaks at a time
- Segments defined by
- Ends of fault traces
- Fault intersections
- Best guesses - segment defined from prior quakes
- Not clear whether the concept of fault
segmentation is correct
64Wasatch Faultsegmentation
1
1
2
3
4
5
6
Keller, 8-21
65HistoryofWasatchsegments
Age of faulting events on the Wasatch Fault
Pinter workbook 10-4
Now
6000
(years)
66How does this apply to SoCal?
- Outline
- Segmentation of the San Andreas Fault
- Behavior of a segment on the San Andreas
- Probabilities for San Andreas segments
- Locations of all SoCal faults
- Total probability across SoCal
67San Andreassegmentation
1906-type events
creep
Four major segments
1857-type events
Keller, 8-20
68Big Onehistoryin SoCal
1857-type segment
Keller, 8-23
69From this history
- 10 events in 1300 years
- An event every 130 years, on average
- Last event 140 years ago
- We are overdue!
- But events are not regularly timed
- So better guess would be
- about 25 chance of this quake in next 30 years
- (thats 30 years / 130 year repeat time)
7030-yr probability of quakes in California
Parkfield
1906 repeat
1857 repeat
Yanev p. 39
1857-type is given 30 chance in 30 years
71Avoid living in fault zone
- Should be zoned for parks
- Or, at a minimum, roadways
- It's best to live 5 miles or more away from
faults - Often unrealistic
- Even creeping faults are bad news
72Relation of danger to faults
- Worst danger near faults
- Most damage within 50 km
- Occasional pockets of damage out to 100-200 km
from rupture - Usually due to very soft soil
- Shape of isoseismals
- M lt 6.5 form circular isoseismals
- Long rupture elongated isoseismals
73Landslides
- Landslide a chunk of ground, usually wet and
weak, breaks loose, then slides down hill - Earthquakes often trigger landslides
- Landslide most common on hillsides, steep slopes
- From both natural and man-made causes
74Summary of soft ground
- Landslides
- Can result from natural or man-made problems
- Biggest slides are natural
- Soft soils have several problems
- Liquefaction, landslide, settling, river banks
- Indications of various problems are similar
- Yanev (an engineer) says to consult an engineer
- Tsunamis can hit some of the same areas
75Tsunamis
- Sea wave triggered by undersea event that uplifts
or downdrops ocean floor - Undersea earthquake
- Undersea landslide
- Undersea volcanic eruption
- Very occasionally, big meteorite impact!!
- These events can displace lots of water,
producing a wave
76Tsunami Hazards
- Several wave crests with 15 minutes between
crests. - Often water withdraws from shore first.
- People go to beach to look, gather clams, etc.
- Water returns very rapidly causing much damage.
- Avoid beach if you feel strong quake!
77Convergence direction
- Indo- Autralian plate underthrusts Asia
- 4 cm/year
- more oblique to north
782004 Great Sumatra Earthquake map of Tsunami
energy propagation
Titov et al.
79Structural componentsof a building
- Distributing elements
- Horizontal components
- Floors and roof
- Resisting elements
- Vertical
- Walls, columns, bracing
- Foundation
- Connections
80Elements of a building
- Distributing elements
- Horizontal components
- Floors and roof
- Resisting elements
- Vertical
- Walls, columns, bracing
- Foundation
- Connections
81Building materials
- Wood and steel preferred over concrete and brick
because - Light, which lessens weight that walls must
support - Flexible so it can deflect without cracking or
breaking. - But too much flexibility is bad, making bracing
necessary
82Wood-frame buildings
- If well-built, safest structures due to lightness
and flexibility of wood - May still have damage if
- On unstable ground
- Not well fastened to foundation
- Inadequate lateral bracing
- Poorly maintained
- Weak foundation
83Diagonal bracing
- Some wood frame houses have only diagonal
bracing, as opposed to plywood sheathing on shear
walls - Weak, and better construction is not expensive
- Sheet rock sheathing has little strength
84Weak diagonal bracing
Soon covered by sheetrock Cut into boards
Yanev 89
85Properplywoodbracing
Lots of nails Big pieces of wood Attach to
foundation
Yanev 90
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