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Published byAntonia Nelson Modified over 9 years ago
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By the end of this unit, you should be able to: Discuss stress and strain and their roles in earthquakes Identify and describe the 3 types of faults Know the differences between elastic and plastic deformations Know the 3 types of waves and how they are different from each other Vocabulary from Chapter 11 in your book
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The shaking or trembling caused by the sudden release of energy Usually associated with faulting or breaking of rocks
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Stress occurs when there is a force on the rocks. Strain is the response to stress 1. Compression-squeeze together 2. Tension-pull apart 3. Shear- Slide Past
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Elastic deformation- low stress, material bends and stretches (pulling of rubber band- goes back into shape Plastic deformation- stress builds past elastic point, causes permanent deformation Failure - occurs when there is a rupture (Break)
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Crack in the earth where plates moves Reverse Fault Land being PUSHED together Seen at convergent boundaries
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Land PULLING apart Caused by tension Divergent boundary
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Also known as a transform fault Land block SLIDING PAST each other (Caused by horizontal sheering) Example San Andreas Fault in California
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Energy that is released by an earthquake Energy travels in the form of waves Three types: P-waves (Primary) S-waves (Secondary) Surface Waves
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P or primary waves fastest waves travel through solids, liquids, or gases compression wave, material movement is in the same direction as wave movement
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S or secondary waves slower than P waves travel through solids only shear waves - move material perpendicular to wave movement
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Surface Waves Travel just below or along the ground’s surface Slower than body waves; rolling and side- to-side movement Especially damaging to buildings
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Focus The point within Earth where faulting begins is the focus---below the surface Epicenter The point directly above the focus on the surface
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Earth’s internal structure Waves change speed and direction depending on the material they go through S Waves do not go through the outer core When the waves change scientists can gain information about the consistency and density of our earth’s layers Shadow zone is created where no P or S waves travel
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Magnitude Richter scale measures total amount of energy released by an earthquake; independent of intensity Intensity Modified Mercalli Scale subjective measure of the kind of damage done and people’s reactions to it
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~ 80% of all earthquakes occur in the Ring-of-Fire most of these result from convergent margin activity more than 150,000 quakes strong enough to be felt are recorded each year
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Damage in Oakland, CA, 1989 Building collapse Fire Tsunami Ground failure
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