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Earthquakes and Earth’s Interior
Key Points are Green
What is an earthquake?
Earthquake a rapid release of kinetic energy given off in the form of waves.
Sensitive instruments around the world record these events
Earthquake faults
Fault lines and plate boundaries are the place where these movements normally originate from.
Stored EnergyEnergy is stored over time in the ground and it gets released once the pressure is greater than the mechanical strength of the rocks can bare. Aftershocks - smaller earthquakes that follow a major earthquakeForeshocks - small earthquakes often preceding a major earthquake by days or, in some cases, by as much as several years.
Seismology: is the study of earth quakes.
The study of earthquake wavesDates back almost 2000 years to the Chinese who looked into pots of water to record these movements.
Seismographs: – are instruments that record seismic waves.
They work by recording the movement of Earth in relation to a stationary mass on a rotating drum or magnetic tape.
Records obtained are called seismograms
There are 3 types of seismic waves
Fastest wave which travels only in through solids, liquids, and gases. Push-pull (compression motion).
Primary (P) waves
Secondary (S) waves
Up down motion at mater moves at right angles to the direction of wave travel.
Travels only through solids Slower velocity than P waves But greater intensity and amplitude than P waves
Surface Waves / Rayleigh waves
Cause greatest destruction Waves exhibit greatest amplitude and slowest velocity
Focus - the place within Earth where earthquake waves originate
Epicenter – location on the surface directly above the focus.
Locating the distance to the epicenter
At least Three station recordings are needed to locate an epicenter
Each station determines the time interval between the arrival of the first P wave and the first S wave at their location.
A travel-time graph is used to determine each station’s distance to
the epicenter
Finding Epicenter: A circle with a radius equal to the distance to the epicenter is drawn around each station. The point where at least three
circles intersect is the earthquake epicenter.
Two measurements that describe the size of an earthquake are
• Intensity – a measure of the degree of earthquake shaking at a given locale based on the amount of damage
• Magnitude – estimates the amount of energy released at the source of the earthquake
Magnitude measurements
Richter scaleNumerical system used to quantify Earthquake strength. Largest magnitude Earthquake was a 9.5 recorded in Chile in 1960. Magnitudes less than 2.0 are not felt by humans Each unit of Richter magnitude increase corresponds to a tenfold increase in wave amplitude and a 32-fold energy increase.
Locating the source of earthquakes
Earthquake depthsDefinite patterns exist • Almost all deep-focus earthquakes occur
in at convergent boundaries. • Many shallow focus occur along the
oceanic ridge system or divergent boundaries
Earthquakes of magnitude 5 or greater over a 10 year period