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Published byChester Horton Modified over 9 years ago
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Section 1: Earth’s Crust in Motion How Do Stress Forces Affect Rock? The movement of earth’s plates creates powerful forces that squeeze or pull the rock in the crust – these forces are examples of stress Stress – a force that acts on rock to change its shape or volume An earthquake is the shaking and trembling that results from the movement of rock beneath earth’s surface
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How Does Stress Affect the Earth’s Crust? Deformation – any change in the volume or shape or earth’s crust Three kinds of stress in the crust: – Shearing – stress that pushes a mass of rock in two opposite directions – Tension – pulls on the crust, stretching rock so that it becomes thinner in the middle like warm bubble gum – Compression – squeezes rock until it folds or breaks like a giant trash compactor
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What Is a Fault? Fault – a break in earth’s crust where slabs of crust slip past each other; These usually occur at plate boundaries
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a. Most faults lie between the surface and a depth of 70 kilometers b. Focus- point below Earth’s surface where rocks break and move c. Epicenter- point above Earth’s surface directly above the focus
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What Kind of Faults Are There? Three Kinds: – Normal Faults – Reverse Faults – Strike-slip faults
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What Are Strike-slip Faults? Strike-slip faults – Shearing forces cause rocks to slip past each other sideways with little up and down Motion; – Ex. San Andreas fault in California
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What Are Normal Faults? Normal faults – Tension forces cause the rocks to form the fault at an angle – One block is above the fault – Hanging wall – the half of the fault that lies above – Footwall – the half of the fault that lies below – Ex. Rio Grande rift valley
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Normal Fault
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What Are Reverse Faults? Reverse faults – compression forces cause the rocks to move towards each other – Same structure as normal fault but the blocks move in opposite direction; hanging wall move up – Ex. Appalachian Mountains and Mount Gould in Glacier National Park
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Reverse Fault
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What type of fault? A miner walks on the foot wall and looks up at the hanging wall! A B Normal Fault Reverse Fault Hanging wall moves d o wn Hanging wall moves up
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Section 2: Measuring Quakes How Does the Energy of an Earthquake Travel Through Earth? Earthquakes – most begin in the lithosphere Focus – the point beneath the earth’s surface where rock that is under stress breaks, triggering an earthquake Epicenter – the point on the earth’s surface directly above the focus
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What Are Seismic Waves? Seismic Waves – vibrations that travel through Earth carrying the energy released during an earthquake – They move like ripples on a pond – They carry the energy of an earthquake away from the focus, through Earth’s interior, and across the surface – The energy is greatest the the Epicenter
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What Are the Different Kinds of Seismic Waves? Three categories: – P waves – S waves – Surface waves P waves and S waves are sent out from the focus ; Surface waves develop when the waves reach the surface
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What Are P Waves? P waves are primary waves – The first waves to arrive – Earthquake waves that compress and expand the ground like an accordion – Cause buildings to contract and expand
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What Are S Waves? S waves are secondary waves – Earthquake waves that vibrate from side to side as well as up and down – These waves shake the ground back and forth – Shake structures violently – Cannot move through liquids
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What Are Surface Waves? When P waves and S waves reach the surface some are transformed into surface waves – Surface waves move more slowly than P waves and S waves – Produce the most severe ground movements – Can make the ground roll like ocean waves or shake buildings from side to side
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How Do Scientists Detect Seismic Waves? Seismograph – records the ground movements caused by seismic waves as they move through the Earth
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How Do Scientists Measure Earthquakes? There are at least 20 different measures for rating earthquakes, three are: – Mercalli – Richter – Moment Magnitude Magnitude – a measurement of earthquake strength based on seismic waves
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What Is the Mercalli Scale? Rated earthquakes according to their intensity – Intensity : strength of ground motion in a given place Not a precise measurement Describes how earthquakes affect people, buildings, and the land surface
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What Is the Richter Scale? A rating of the size of seismic waves as measured by a particular type of seismograph Accurate measurements for small, nearby earthquakes not large, distant earthquakes
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What Is the Moment Magnitude? A rating system that estimates the total energy released by an earthquake Can be used to rate earthquakes of all sizes, near or far Below 5.0 – little damage Above 5.0 – great destruction
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Earthquake damage in Charleston
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February 21, 1916 Asheville, NC - the most intense earthquake in NC history, measuring a 6 on the Mercalli scale. June 5, 1998 an earthquake in Moorseville, NC measured 3.2 on the Richter scale, but there was no reported damage.
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Mantle- directly above the outer core 1. Plasticity is the property of a solid with the ability to flow like a liquid at very, very slow rates. a. High temperature and pressure allow the rock to flow like a liquid b. This also allows the plates of Earth (lithosphere) to move on the mantle.
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MANTLE The mantle is composed of silicon, oxygen, iron and magnesium. 3. Moho- boundary between the crust and the mantle. a.Change in the speed of seismic waves moving through the Earth led to its discovery. b. Discovered in 1909 by a Yugoslav scientist, Andrija Mohorovicic.
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How Do Scientists Locate the Epicenter? Geologists use seismic waves – P waves arrive first – S waves arrive close behind – Scientist measure the difference in arrival times The farther away an earthquake is the greater the time between their arrival – Scientists draw three circles using data from seismographs set at different stations to see where they intersect – the epicenter
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