Title: Faulting
1Faulting
2Faults
- They result from brittle fracture in rock and
involve rapid movement of - crust on either side of a fault plane.
- Fault planes are usually not vertical, they dip
(are inclined) at an angle - into the crust.
- Faults are classified based on the movement
which has occurred relative - to the fault plane, as in up-down motion
(dip-slip) or horizontal motion - (strike-slip).
3Faults develop in response to stress or forces
(p. 17, top) Stress force applied to
rock Strain change in rock due to stress
(deformation)
Reverse dip slip fault
Normal dip slip fault
Strike slip fault
4See pg. 15 and 16 in CP
East
West
Fault _at_ surface
(rock above fault plane)
(Rock below fault plane)
Fault plane (dips east)
Dip-slip Fault up/down motion Strike-slip Fault
side by side motion
5rift valley
Normal Faults
Fault scarp
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9Reverse Fault
Thrust Fault
10Reverse Fault
11Thrust Fault
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13fig. D p. 16
- Face fault
- Cross fault
- Direction you go (left or right)
- to find rest of displaced feature
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21Earthquakes / Seismology
- Earthquakes occur when stress overcomes the
strength of the rock. - Sudden movement occurs along a fault plane.
- Seismic waves propagate out from ruptured area
along the fault plane. -
22Faults
- Active faults last 10,000 yrs
- Potentially active last 1.65 million years
- Types of faults
- Reverse, normal, left-lateral, right lateral
- Buried or surface faults
23Elastic Rebound Theory
Rocks are subjected to stress
- Theory explains how rocks respond to stress
- Elastic energy is stored in rocks as they are
subjected to stress, strain builds. - Earthquakes occur when stress exceeds strength of
rock, strain is released as rock breaks. - Rock will vibrate as energy is released, then
return to original shape, spring back or
rebound.
Strain builds
Stored energy released, Fault ruptures--gt
Earthquake
Rocks slip and snap back
24Dilatancy
- At 5 km, the overburden pressure is about equal
to the strength of the rocks. Rocks should
behave plastically at this depth however,
earthquakes (rupture) still occurs here and at
greater depths. How? - Answer Water in the pore spaces
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26Surface location directly above focus
(seismic waves)
Origin of earthquake or area of fault rupture.
Most are shallow.
(Hypocenter)
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28Seismic Waves
- Body waves travel through Earths interior, 2
types - 1) P wave primary wave, fastest wave (5km/sec or
12,000 miles/hr) - Compressional wave, moves like a slinky.
- Propagates through all mediums (liquid, solid,
and gas). - 2) S wave secondary wave, slower than P wave
(1.7 X slower) - Shear wave, moves perpendicular to direction of
propagation. - Only propagate through solid material.
-
29S waves
30Surface Waves
- These are not classified as body waves.
- Surface waves propagate in crust near the
surface. - Slower than body waves
- 2 types
- Highest amplitude on seismogram
Love wave
Rayleigh Wave
31Seismogram record of seismic wave energy
32Epicenter
- All wave energy originates _at_ the
- focus.
- Wave velocity depends on temperature of
- rock, and the type of rock.
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34Seismic Tomography Image middle Earth
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37Finding earthquake epicenters by triangulation
Travel-time graph
38Magnitude Measure of energy released during an
earthquake
.
39Richter Magnitude
- Richter Magnitude (ML)
- The largest amplitude produced by an earthquake
on a seismograph 100 km from the epicenter - Logarithmic ground motion increases by 10 times
for each unit of M - Energy released increases 32X for each unit of M
40- Richter Magnitude scale
- measures largest amplitude on seismogram.
- Nomagraph used to calculate magnitude
- Logarithmic scale magnitude 5 is 10x stronger
than a 4 and 100x stronger than a 3.
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43- Moment Magnitude scale
- Newer scale and more reliable for large
earthquakes. - Strength of rock
- Rupture area
- displacement
1979, Imperial Valley Fault
1964, Magnitude 9.2 in Anchorage Alaska
44Great Earthquakes
- 15 largest earthquakes in the US
- 1) Alaska, 1964 9.2 6) Alaska, 1899 8.2
- 2) Alaska, 1957 8.8 7) Alaska, 1986 8.0
- 3) Alaska, 1965 8.7 8) California, 1906 8.1
- 4) Alaska, 1938 8.3 9) Missouri, 1811 8.1
- 5) Alaska1958 8.3