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Earthquakes
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Earthquakes- Vibrations produced by movement at a fault.
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Where do earthquakes happen?
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Plate Tectonics
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Sliding past one another - transform boundary
Running into one another - convergent boundary Moving away from one another - divergent boundary
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Fault- A break in the rock along which movement occurs.
Types of faults Normal fault Reverse or thrust fault Strike-slip fault
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Normal Fault- When tension pulls rocks apart, causing one side to fall down in relation to the other side.*
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Normal Fault
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Normal Fault near Death Valley
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Reverse or Thrust Fault- Compression forces rocks above the fault up and over the rocks below the fault surface.*
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Reverse or Thrust Fault
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Thrust or Reverse Faults
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Strike-Slip Fault- Transform or shear pressures cause rocks on either side of the fault to slide past each other.*
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Strike-Slip Fault
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Strike-slip Fault
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Focus- The point where the rocks break.
Epicenter- The point on the surface directly above the focus.
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Types of Waves P-waves S-waves Surface waves
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Primary Wave (P)- Fastest moving seismic wave
Primary Wave (P)- Fastest moving seismic wave. Travels through solids, liquids, and gases.*
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Secondary Wave (S)- Second fastest wave
Secondary Wave (S)- Second fastest wave. Can travel through solids, not liquids.
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Surface Wave (L)- The slowest wave. They cause the most damage.*
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Moho- The boundary between the crust and the mantle where seismic waves speed up.*
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Magnitude- A measure of the energy released by an earthquake as measured on the Richter Scale, which goes from 1 (weakest) to 10 (strongest).
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Seismograph- Instrument used to measure earthquake magnitude.*
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Wasatch Fault from Space
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The Wasatch Fault at Provo UT
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The San Andreas Fault This is a map view of the san andreas fault which is a strike-slip fault. Pressure builds up along this fault line and is released as one side slides past the other side.
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Cypress Freeway Collapse
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Crack opened up during the Earthquake.
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The 1906 San Francisco Quake
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1906 Earthquake Cont.
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1906 earthquake damage and refugee camps
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The Great Alaskan Earthquake
This quake occurred on Good Friday in 1964. It was a magnitude 9.2, and the 2nd largest earthquake ever recorded. It is the largest earthquake recorded in North America.
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The Great Alaskan Quake-Shaking continued for 4 minutes.
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Great Alaskan Quake Cont.
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Big Bear Earthquake, CA. Magnitude 6.4, June 1992.
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Hyogo-Ken Naubu Earthquake
Earthquake occurred in Japan on January 17, 1995. This freeway toppled over during the quake.
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Liquefaction- Water is shaken to the surface and the soil becomes unstable.
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Liquefaction Liquefaction occurs during an earthquake.
Dirt particles line up and compact, allowing water to rise to the surface. The surface can turn into liquid mud. Heavy things sink, light things rise.
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Effects of Liquefaction
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Liquefaction in Kobe, Japan-1995.
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Liquefaction in Kobe, cont.
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Tsunami- An ocean wave generated by an earthquake.
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