Title: What is an earthquake?
1What is an earthquake?
1906 San Francisco earthquake
- Shaking or vibration of the ground
- rocks undergoing deformation break suddenly along
a fault
2Oblique view of the San Andreas fault and San
Francisco
3Where are earthquakes found?
- The Earths surface is composed of a number of
mobile tectonic plates which are in constant
motion - Most earthquakes are found at plate margins
4Plate tectonics
- The constant movement of the plates is referred
to as plate tectonics - There are three main types of plate boundaries
- divergent
- convergent
- transform
5Divergent margins
- Here two tectonic plates are in the process of
being created - Magma is injected into a crack, then cools and
becomes new crust
6An example of a wide, mature divergent margin
- The middle of the Atlantic Ocean is a divergent
margin which is being torn, or rifted, apartthe
two plates are separating continuously at a rate
of several cm/yr
7An immature divergent plate margin
- The Red Sea represents a young rift which is just
beginning to separate Arabia from Africa - Here, too, volcanism is evident, as a result of
rifting
8Volcanism in the Afar triangle
- Erta Ale, a volcano slightly west of the Red
Sea, represents the splitting apart and thinning
of the African continent
9Convergent margins I
- Instead of two plates being created, they are
being consumed - Here an oceanic plate slides beneath a
continental plate, since the former is denser - geologists refer to this process as subduction
- Large, destructive earthquakes occur here
10Convergent margins II
- If two continental plates collide, they do not
subduct, because they are too buoyant - Instead, intense compression with crustal
shortening and thickening occur - Large, destructive earthquakes also are generated
in this situation
11Transform margins
- The third type of plate margin is called a
transform boundary - Here, plates are neither created nor destroyed
- they simply slide by one another
12So heres the big picture of what were living on
13Where are the worlds earthquakes in terms of
plate tectonics?
- The great majority of earthquakes are located at
plate margins - This where magmatism, friction, faulting, etc.,
are most intense - Earthquakes in plate interiors are comparatively
rare
14(No Transcript)
15The Pacific Rim of Fire
- This notorious zone is characterized by
subduction zones - Earthquakes and volcanoes here are particularly
violent - friction from subduction produces large
destructive quakes
16North American seismic hazards
17Canadian seismic hazards
18Seismic hazard in eastern Canada
19Faults associated with earthquakes
- Faults are planes of weakness along which the
Earth has been broken - Movements on a fault can be either slow (ductile
deformation) or fast (brittle fracture) - When a fault behaves in a brittle manner and
breaks, earthquakes are generated
20Three types of dominantly vertical faults
- A normal fault is the result of tensional forces
(e.g., rifting) - Reverse and thrust faults are the result of
horizontal compression
21Faults whose movement is dominantly horizontal
- These faults are termed strike-slip faults
- They are a small-scale version of transform plate
tectonic margins - They are termed left-lateral (sinistral) or
right-lateral (dextral) according to their
movement
22Earthquake generation along a fault
- The earthquake focus is its point of origin along
a fault plane - Its epicenter is the vertical projection of the
focus to the surface
23Elastic rebound theory
- Before fault rupture, rock deforms
- after rupture, rocks return to their original
shape - ...maybe1
- 1Pallett Creek shows similar slip amounts after
different periods of time possibly not resetting
to zero? See Sieh and Levay, 1998, p. 90
24Richter magnitudes
- The Richter magnitude measures the maximum
amplitude of ground shaking - It is a logarithmic scale
- 1 Richter unit difference is x 10 for ground
motion and x 33 for energy
- Globally, small earthquakes are more frequent
than large - 800,000/yr for events of magnitude 2.0-3.4
- while an event of magnitude 8 occurs once every
5-10 years
25Richter magnitudes
26Destructiveness of an earthquake
- Earthquake magnitude
- Distance to epicenter
- Depth
- Strength of building
- Nature of soil or bedrock on which foundations
are built - Other local conditions
27A challenge
- You yourself can calculate Richter magnitudes and
epicenters from seismogram data. Go to - http//vcourseware.sonoma.edu/VirtualEarthquake/
- Not only will you understand the science behind
earthquake determinations, there are also
material rewards...
28Diplomas !
29The San Andreas fault
- Along much of the west coast, the plate boundary
is a transform margin
30San Andreas fault
- Although some people think San Francisco is
falling into the Pacific Ocean, part of the
city is actually already part of the Pacific
plate - The San Andreas is a right-lateral strike-slip or
transform fault
31San Andreas fault
32Right-lateral motion
Photos from Shelton, 1966
33Right-lateral motion
Photo, diagram from Sieh and LeVay, 1998
34Some history
- The strike-slip nature of the San Andreas was not
widely appreciated for up to 50 years after the
1906 San Francisco earthquake
- Yet rocks on either side of the fault are
different - The older the rocks, the greater the displacement
- Eocene-age rocks (37-58 Ma) show offsets up to
300 km
35San Francisco, 18 April 1906
- Magnitude 7.8, epicenter near San Francisco
- 400 million US in damage
- this is 1906 dollars equivalent to hundreds of
billions of dollars today - 700 people reported killed
- this is probably a 3-4 times underestimate thus
2,000-3,000 dead, mostly in San Francisco
361906 - location and seismic trace
Seismic trace of 1906 quake from a seismic
station 15,000 miles away in Gottingen, Germany
371906 - comparative magnitude
- This event is northern Californias most powerful
event in recorded history
381906 - extent and slip
The northernmost 430 km of the San Andreas
ruptured, with horizontal slippage up to 8-9
meters
391906 - slip
- This photograph shows a fence near Bolinas offset
2.5 meters
401906 - intensity and shaking
- Maximum Mercalli values were VII to IX, which
represent severe damage - Shaking lasted 45-60 seconds (for Loma Prieta
1989 and Northridge 1994, shaking lasted 5-10 s) - Shaking intensity correlated with geology, e.g.,
bedrock vs. landfill
411906 - earthquake damage in San Francisco
421906 - earthquake damage in San Francisco
431906 - earthquake damage in San Francisco
441906 - some lessons learned
- Big quakes can be followed by decades of seismic
quiet - Quakes the size of the 1906 event appear to occur
every several hundred (200?) years
451906 - some lessons learned (ctd.)
- In the short term, San Francisco and environs are
most at risk from an event of magnitude 6-7
461906 - some lessons not learned
A topographic map of San Francisco from 1950...
and a 1980 version of the same map
47Future quakes in the San Francisco Bay area
Note the high probability of an earthquake of
M gt 6.6 occurring before 2030 in this area
48Cascadia
- In the Pacific Northwest, the tectonic regime is
subduction-related, rather than transform as we
have seen in California
49Cascadia
Here, there is evidence for very large
earthquakes over the last several thousand
yearsthe most recent is 300 years ago
50Quebec
- The St. Lawrence region has high levels of
seismicity for a zone in the interior of a
tectonic plate - This seismicity may be related to old, aborted
rifts about 200 Ma ago
Map from Lamontagne (1999)
51Quebec - Montreal region
- Ottawa River axis
- more active Montreal-Maniwoki axis
- M 5.8, 1732, Montreal
- M 6.2, 1935, Temiscamingue
- M 5.6, 1944, Cornwall-Massena, NY
52Quebec - Charlevoix region
- Events 1638 M7 1663 M6 1791 M6.5 1870 M6.2
1925 ( 2 million in damage at the time) - fracturing and high pore fluid pressures
- old rift faults serving as conduits for
pressurized crustal fluids, which trigger quakes
53Charlevoix
Charlevoix also has evidence for a meteorite
impact crater, which served to fragment and
fracture rocks (from Lamontagne, 1999)
54Effects of earthquakes aftershocks
- Aftershocks normally occur after a major
earthquake - There may be many thousands of aftershock events
over the space of months or even years - Although their magnitudes generally decrease with
time, aftershocks have potential to cause
significant damage to already weakened materials
(e.g., rocks, soils, buildings, power and gas
lines)
55Effects liquefaction
Liquefaction hazard in the San Francisco Bay area
- Wet, unsolidated soils and sediments are highly
vulnerable - Under shaking, the ground simply flows
- Landfills, harbours, and the like are at risk
56Effects landslides
- The ground vibrations and severe shaking
associated with an earthquake can induce
landslides in mountainous areas - This example in the Santa Susana Mtns. was caused
by the 1994 Northridge event near Los Angeles
57Effects tsunamis
- Tsunamis are ocean waves caused by displacements
from earthquakes, landslides, etc. - They can be devastating at great distances from
the epicenter
Tsunami damage in Hilo, Hawaii, as a result of
the 22 May 1960 Chile earthquake
58Effects building destruction
- Buildings are damaged or destroyed by ground
vibrations and shaking - The magnitude and duration of shaking are
important factors in the extent of damage - Liquefaction and aftershocks increase the damage
Building damage near the epicenter of the 1989
Loma Prieta earthquake
59Effects on building materials
- Masonry is not capable of withstanding
significant bending stresses - Wood is more resistant because it is more
yielding - But wood is vulnerable to fires...
60Effects fires
- The ground shaking will rupture power and gas
lines - and damage to water mains prevents or hinders
fire fighting efforts - the photo shows a broken gas line from the 1994
Northridge earthquake
61Devastating fires in San Francisco after the 1906
earthquake
62Effects personal loss
- We are examining earthquakes from a scientific
perspective - but we must not forget the human element and the
pathos conveyed by this photograph from the 1994
Northridge earthquake
63Mitigating earthquakes
- Seismic hazard maps and risk maps help to
properly site and construct buildings
64Where to build your dream or trophy house - and
where not to build
- Avoid unstable soils and unconsolidated
materials... - avoid mountainous terrain prone to landslides
- and above all, avoid active faults !
65Appropriate building codes which can withstand
earthquake damage
- Bedrock foundations best
- Avoid asymmetrical buildings
- Bolt house firmly to foundations
- Appliances firmly bolted down
- Gas lines flexible
- Cupboards, shelving attached to walls
- Heavy objects at low levels anchor heavy
furniture - Beds away from windows to avoid broken glass
66Warning and prediction
- Precursory seismicity
- Precursory deformation
- Changes in physical properties of rocks near a
fault - Changes in water levels, soil gases
- Unusual behaviour of animals
67Earthquake prediction
- Important concepts
- earthquake recurrence intervalseismic gap
- role of paleoseismology
- Yet our predictive ability is rudimentary, so we
use probabilities - e.g., 86 probability that a destructive quake of
Mgt7 will hit southern California in the next 30
years (1994 estimate)
68Earthquakes - reading
- U.S. Geological Survey, 1999. Major quake likely
to strike between 2000 and 2030. U.S. Geological
Survey Fact Sheet 152-99, 4 pp.
(http//pubs.usgs.gov/fs/1999/fs152-99/) - Pelman, D., 2000. Tiny movements ease fault risk
in East Bay pressure builds up less in northern
Hayward segment. San Francisco Chronicle, 18
August 2000. (http//www.sfgate.com/) - Eastern Canadian seismicity
- http//earthquakescanada.nrcan.gc.ca/historic_eq/2
0th/e_damaging_e.php
69Earthquakes - web
- Canadian seismicity
- http//www.pgc.nrcan.gc.ca
- US seismicity
- http//earthquake.usgs.gov/
- San Francisco Bay area
- http//www.abag.ca.gov/bayarea/eqmaps