Title: EARTHQUAKES AND EARTH
1EARTHQUAKES AND EARTHS INTERIOR
2Objectives
- Explain the connection between earthquakes and
plate tectonics. - Identify several earthquake-related hazards.
- Define body waves and surface waves.
- Explain how the materials in Earths interior
affect seismic waves. - Define and describe the composition of Earths
crust, mantle and core.
3Megathrust earthquakes
4Earthquakes and earthquake hazards
- Seismology
- The scientific study of earthquakes and seismic
waves - Seismic waves
- An elastic shock wave that travels outward in all
directions from an earthquakes source - Seismic creep
5Earthquakes and plate motion
- The elastic rebound theory
- Continuing stress along a fault
- Results in buildup of elastic energy in the rocks
- Energy abruptly released when an earthquake occurs
6Earthquakes and plate motion
7Earthquake Hazards and Predictions
- Primary hazards
- Collapsing buildings, bridges and other
structures - Aftershock
- Secondary hazards
- Landslides, fires, ground liquefaction, tsunamis
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9Earthquake hazards
Landslide, Huascaran, Peru
Open fissure, Golcuk, Turkey
10Earthquake hazards
Fire, San Francisco, California
Ground liquification, Niigata, Japan
11The Sumatra-Andaman Tsunami (2004)
12Earthquake prediction
- Short-term prediction and early warning
- Precursor phenomena
- Foreshocks
- Long-term forecasting
- Paleoseismology
- The study of prehistoric earthquakes
- Seismic gaps
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14Earthquake Readiness
- Preparation and readiness to earthquakes key to
reducing fatalities - Reinforced structures
- Bolting wood-framed buildings to foundation
- Protecting utility lines from movement
- Education
15The Science of Seismology
- Seismograph
- An instrument that detects and measures
vibrations of Earths surface - Advanced seismographs detect vibrations 10-8 of a
centimeter - Seismogram
- The record made by a seismograph
16The Science of Seismology
17Seismic waves
- Body wave
- Travels through Earths interior
- Surface wave
- Travels along Earths surface
- Focus
- Where rupture commences and an earthquakes
energy is first released
18Locating earthquakes
- Compressional wave
- Wave consisting of alternating pulses of
compression and expansion - Can pass through any medium (solids, liquids,
gases) - P (or primary) wave
- Shear wave
- Rock is subjected to side to side or up and down
forces, perpendicular to waves direction of
travel - S (secondary) wave
- Not transmitted through water
- Travel slower than P waves
19Locating earthquakes
20Locating earthquakes
21Locating earthquakes
- Epicenter
- The point on Earths surface directly above an
earthquakes focus
22Locating earthquakes
23Measuring Earthquakes
- The Richter Magnitude Scale
- A scale of earthquake intensity based on the
recorded heights, or amplitudes, of the seismic
waves recorded on a seismograph - A logarithmic scalea 10 fold increase in
amplitude for each unit - Moment Magnitude Scale
- A measure of earthquake strength that is based on
the rupture size, rock properties, and amount of
displacement on the fault surface
24Measuring Earthquakes
Richter magnitude 7
Richter magnitude 6
Richter magnitude 8
25Studying Earths Interior
- Seismic discontinuity
- A boundary inside Earth where the velocities of
seismic waves change abruptly
26Studying Earths Interior
27Studying Earths Interior
- Three things can happen to seismic waves when
they meet a boundary - Refraction bent as they pass from one material
to another - Reflection some or all of the wave energy
bounces back - Absorption some or all of the wave energy is
blocked
28How geologists look into Earths interior
- Seismic tomography
- Allows geologists to image inside of Earth
- Direct observation
- Drilling
- Xenoliths
- Indirect observation
- Magnetism
- Density
29Diamonds!
30A Multilayered Planet
- Crust
- The outermost compositional layer of the solid
Earth, part of the Lithosphere - Thickness ranges between 8 kilometers (oceanic)
and 45 km (continental) -
31A Multilayered Planet
32A Multilayered Planet
- Mantle
- The middle compositional layer of Earth, between
the core and the crust - Comprised primarily of olivine and pyroxene
- Asthenosphere mantle where rock is near melting
- Mantle-core boundary mesosphere
33A Multilayered Planet
34A Multilayered Planet
- Core
- Innermost layer, where the magnetic field is
generated and much geothermal energy resides - Separated into outer core (liquid) and inner core
(solid)
35Critical Thinking
- If you were on a ship in the ocean, would you be
able to feel an earthquake that occurred below
you, on the ocean floor? - Do you think there is no limit to the magnitude
of earthquakes? - What kind of wave would you expect to travel
faster a seismic wave or a tsunami wave?