Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Chapter 12 Section 2 Earthquakes
2
What is an earthquake? Earthquake- The shaking that results from the movement of rock beneath the Earth’s surface
3
Types of stress Shearing- stress that pushes a rock in two separate directions Tension- stretches rock, causing it to become thinner in the middle Compression- pushes the two plates together until they either fold or break
4
Types of stress
5
Kinds of Faults 1 Fault – crack where movement was
Strike Slip Faults- from shearing Normal Faults- Footwall rises above hanging wall Reverse Faults- Hanging wall rises above footwall
6
Normal Fault Reverse Fault Strike-Slip Fault
7
Strike-slip faults
8
FOCUS & EPICENTER 2-3 Focus- The point beneath the Earth’s surface where rock breaks under stress and causes an earthquake Epicenter- The point on the Earth’s surface directly above an earthquake’s focus
15
Triangulation to find the epicenter
17
Epicenters on a larger scale
18
3 Types of Earthquake Waves 57
(P)rimary waves- push pull waves (S)econdary waves- side to side waves (L) Surface waves- up and down rolls Seismic Waves- Earthquake waves that are compressional and transverse.
19
1. Primary waves (P-waves) – arrive at a given point before any other type of seismic wave. (fastest of the three)
20
2. Secondary Waves (S-waves) – arrive at a given point after the P wave. (second fastest)
21
3. Surface waves (L-waves) – slowest moving seismic waves. Arrives last. Most destructive!
24
Seismographs We use a seismograph to measure/ detect seismic waves
25
Modern day seismographs
28
Ways we measure earthquakes
Mercalli scale- relies on eyewitness accounts Richter scale- measures ground movement Moment Magnitude scale- uses both eyewitness accounts and ground movement
29
Major continental U.S. earthquakes
30
How earthquakes cause damage
Loose soil Can cause landslides or mudslides
31
Liquefaction Soil and the water that is in it become separated Because the soil is heavier, it sinks pushing the water to the surface
33
Mudslide and landslide
34
San Andreas Fault
35
Why earthquakes in Japan?
36
Building damaged by liquefaction
37
Earthquake damage
39
San Francisco 1906 Earthquake
40
Los Angeles 1994
41
San Francisco 1989
42
Crack in the surface
43
Faults in California
44
Movement along a fault
45
Buildings in Japan after earthquake
46
Aftershocks Movement along a fault that occurs after a larger earthquake along that same fault
47
Tsunamis Tidal waves that can reach upwards to 115 feet Caused by Earthquakes that happen deep under water
49
2004 Sumatra tsunami
50
Tsunami travel time
51
Tsunami height
52
Tsunami in Bangladesh
53
Tsunami damage
54
Days before tsunami Few minutes before tsunami During tsunami
55
During an earthquake, how do you protect yourself?
Go under a table Go under a doorway Go under steps
56
Earthquake Hazards
57
Earthquake prone areas in the Midwest U.S.
58
How do we monitor movements in the faults?
Creep meters Laser-ranging devices Tilt meters Satellite monitors
59
Creep Meter
60
Fault detecting laser
61
Tilt meter
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.