Title: 1001 Severe Weather: Thunderstorms, Tornadoes
110/01 Severe Weather Thunderstorms, Tornadoes
Lightning/Hazards 10/03 Midterm 10/05 Video 3
Extreme Weather Storms of the Century and Deadly
Skies (Assignment 1 due) (Assignment 3 hand
out)10/08 Thanks Giving No class 10/10
Severe Weather Hurricanes, Typhoons
Cyclones10/12 Groundwater Hazard
Revised course schedule
2Earthquakes
- What are Earthquakes?
- An earthquake is a sudden vibration or trembling
in the Earth. - More than 150,000 tremors strong enough to be
felt by humans occur each year worldwide. - Earthquake motion is caused by the quick release
of stored energy in the rocks beneath the Earths
surface.
3- Earthquakes occur when energy stored in
elastically strained rocks is suddenly released. - Sends waves of energy, called seismic waves,
throughout the Earth. - This release of energy causes intense ground
shaking in the area near the source of the
earthquake. - This sudden release may cause one huge mass of
rock to slide past another mass of rock into a
different relative position. The break between
these two rock masses is called a fault. - EQs are definitely a geologic hazard for those
living in earthquake prone areas.
4Origin of Earthquakes
- Most earthquakes occur where the crust undergoes
deformation due to plate tectonic forces
discussed in previous lecture. - Usually earthquakes where rock breaks to produce
faults. - It is crucial in order to understand earthquakes
to explore different pressures acting upon rocks
and the resultant faults.
5Uniform stress from all directions
Differential stress stress is not equal from all
directions
6For any inclined fault plane we define the block
above the fault as the hanging wall block and the
block below the fault as the footwall block.
Normal Faults - are faults that result from
horizontal tensional stresses
Reverse Faults - are faults that result from
horizontal compressional stresses
A Thrust Fault is a special case of a reverse
fault where the dip of the fault is less than
15o. Thrust faults can have considerable
displacement, measuring hundreds of kilometers,
and can result in older strata overlying younger
strata.
Source adapted from www.tulane.edu
7- Strike Slip Faults - are faults where the
relative motion on the fault has taken place
along a horizontal direction. Such faults result
from shear or transform stresses acting in the
crust. Strike slip faults can be of two
varieties, depending on the sense of
displacement. - left-lateral strike-slip fault.
- right-lateral strike-slip fault.
8Elastic rebound theory Earthquake cycle
9Earthquakes
Motion is transmitted from the point of sudden
energy release, the earthquake focus.
Movement of body waves away from the focus of the
earthquake. The epicenter is the location on the
surface directly above the earthquake's focus.
10Seismic waves
www.amnh.org/.../1999/hagenauer.html
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15Seismometer
Seismogram
16How Seismographs Work
17Travel time curves
Step 1 Measure
185300
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20Richter Magnitude
Nomograph chart Uses the distance from the
earthquake (P S time in seconds) and the S-wave
amplitude (in mm) to determine the earthquake
magnitude)
ML log10A(mm) (Distance correction factor)
21Earthquake size and characteristics
22Isoseismal map
http//www.seismo.unr.edu/ftp/pub/louie/class/100/
mercalli.html
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24Moment Magnitude Scale
Seismologists have more recently developed a
standard magnitude scale that is completely
independent of the type of instrument. It is
called the moment magnitude.
- Takes into account the nature of material that
faulted (rigidity of rocks). - The size of area that ruptured.
- And the amount of slippage.
25Shakemap
26http//www.seismo.nrcan.gc.ca/recent/index_e.php
27Earthquake frequency
Source Byrne Christopherson, 2006)
28Summary
- Different fault systems
- Elastic rebound theory strain and stress
- Seismic waves 4 types
- Locating epicenter using seismograms
- Different earthquake scales and maps, such as
Richter, Mercalli, Moment magnitude and shaking
maps - Earthquake frequencies
29- Canadian Earthquake Hazards Program
- http//earthquakescanada.nrcan.gc.ca/hazard/index_
e.php - Other Institutions
- Geological Survey of CanadaEarthquakes
CanadaPacific Geoscience CentreSouthern Ontario
Seismic NetworkLithoprobe Seismic Processing
Facility (LSPF)