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EarthquakesVolcanoesEarthquakes, volcanoes and plate tectonics
Elastic Rebound: when rocks are put stress they may break causing elastic rebound
Rocks change shape or deform slowly over a long period of time
Energy is released and vibrations move through rock which is known as earthquakes
The surface of a break where rocks move as a result of elastic rebound is called a fault
Faults can be either normal, reverse or strike-slip depending on whether they are pulled apart, move together, or move past each other (shear forces)
Earthquakes release waves and are transmitted through the earth
These waves are called seismic waves
When the potential energy is released from strained rocks seismic waves are released
The point at which the the energy is released is called the focus
The point above the earthquake focus (at the surface) is called the epicenter
These seismic waves travel from focus throughout the earth’s interior(3 waves released)
P-waves or primary waves are the fastest waves to move through the interior They move back and forth in the same direction as the
waves are moving S-waves or secondary waves move at a slower
pace and move in an up and down pattern at right angles to the direction of the wave
L-waves or surface waves arrives last and cause the most damage for buildings and structures at the surface (at surface they move side-to-side)
Seismograph is an instrument that records seismic waves
Seismic waves are recorded by a pen on a pendulum that increases a line in a graph according to the magnitude of the earthquake
Move all heavy objects to lower shelves Secure your gas hot-water heater and
appliances Seismic safe structures assured by
building codes helps to build structures so they can ride out vibrations of earthquakes
Steel and rubber supports help riding out the vibrations
Spiral re-enforcment rods on cement pillars help keep bridges and buildings up during earthquakes
Small seismic activities are better than no seismic activity in an earthquake prone area
If an earthquake prone area has no earthquake activity it could lead up to one large slippage where damage at surface is great
How do volcanoes form Rising magma, solids, and gases spew
out onto earth’s surface to form cone-shaped mountains are called volcanoes
Magma (molten rock) that reaches the surface through vents is called lava
Volcanoes have circular holes near their summits are called craters
Tephra are bits of rock or solidified lava dropped from the air (could be ash, cinders, or larger rocks called bombs or blocks)
Volcanic islands form when oceanic crust and mantle collides
Older denser oceanic crust subducts or sinks beneath less dense mantle, where it melts forming a magma pool and rises to form volcanic islands
Pyroclastic flows are massive avalanches of hot glowing rock flowing on a cushion of intensely hot gases
Composition of magma influences how destructive a volcano can be
The more silica in the magma, the thicker the magma and more chance that it will have a violent eruption
Iron and magnesium rich magma is more fluid and erupts quietly (low silica content)
Water vapor and gases trapped in magma by silica rich magma leads to violent eruptions
Basaltic lava (high in iron and magnesuim and low in silica) flow in broad flat layers
Shield volcanoes have broad bases with gently sloping sides
Hawaiian islands are an example
Lower altitude volcanic mountains that form as a result of layers volcanic ash, lava, and cinders (usually less than 300 m in height)
Moderate to violent eruptions occur
Gases are important to formation of cinder cone volcanoes
Steep sided mountains composed of alternating layers of lava and tephra
Erupt violently releasing large quantities of ash and gas
Then lava layers flow in between the tephra layers (mountains formed because of subduction zones and magma rise to surface)
Cascade Mountains are composite volcanoes
Very fluid magma can ooze from cracks or fissures in earth’s crust
Low viscosity of lava allows it to flow like water across the surface
Flood basalts form lava plateau like the Columbia River Basalt flows
Built up in some areas 2 miles thick extending from Canada to California to Wyoming
Where volcanoes form: most volcanoes form along plate boundaries
Divergent plate boundaries: Where plates move apart long cracks form (rifts)
When plates move apart, stress is placed on the crust that allows cracks to form where magma rises to those weaken fractures
Fissures are formed where magma flows as lava reaches the surface (primarily at rifts) Basalt is most common rock at rifts zones
Dense oceanic crust dives under continental crust at convergent boundariesWhen one plate dives under another plate,
basalt and sediment are carried deep under earth’s surface
The material eventually melt and rises through weakness and cracks above to the surface
Pacific rim volcanoes like the Cascade Mts are examples
There are areas on earth’s surface that is hotter than others where there is a pool of magma below
Plates moves over these hot spots and allows the magma to rise and reach the surface
Volcanoes are formed above these hot spots
Hawaiian islands form in the middle of convergent and divergent zones
80% of earthquakes occur along the Pacific Rim of Fire
Earthquakes are a result of pressure and stress built up by moving plates at convergent and divergent boundaries