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Published byMagnus Parsons Modified over 9 years ago
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Earthquakes and Seismic Waves 2-1
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What is an Earthquake? Shaking and trembling that results from the movement of rock beneath Earth’s surface Occur when stress along a fault increases so much that the rock breaks Releases an enormous amount of stored energy Most begin in lithosphere
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Parts of an earthquake Focus-where earthquake starts beneath the surface Epicenter-point on surface directly above focus
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Seismic waves Move like ripples on pond Carry energy from earthquake away from focus, through Earth’s interior, and across the surface Includes P waves, S waves, and surface waves
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Types of Seismic Waves
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Mercalli Scale Rates level of damage 12 step scale Same earthquake can have different ratings in different locations
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Richter Rating of earthquakes magnitude based on size of seismic waves Scale of 10 Measured with seismograph Good for nearby earthquakes **Each point increase in magnitude represents a release of 32x more energy
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Moment Magnitude Estimates total energy released Rates earthquakes near and far Looks at: – kinds of seismic waves and how strong they were – how much the fault moved – strength of the rocks that broke What we usually hear on news
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Locating Epicenter Measure difference between the arrival of P and S waves The farther away the earthquake, the greater the time difference between the arrival of P and S waves Draw circles from data from at least 3 different seismographs The radius of each circle is the distance from seismograph to epicenter
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