vii. earthquakes

35
VII. Earthquakes A. Introduction B. Source of seismic energy C. Propagation of seismic energy D. Recording earthquakes E. Magnitude scales

Upload: badu

Post on 06-Jan-2016

44 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

VII. Earthquakes. Introduction Source of seismic energy Propagation of seismic energy Recording earthquakes Magnitude scales. San Francisco, 1906. Building design could not withstand accelerations $Millions of damage Thousands of people killed. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: VII. Earthquakes

VII. Earthquakes

A. Introduction

B. Source of seismic energy

C. Propagation of seismic energy

D. Recording earthquakes

E. Magnitude scales

Page 2: VII. Earthquakes

Building design could not withstand accelerations

$Millions of damage

Thousands of people killed

San Francisco, 1906

Page 3: VII. Earthquakes

Geology in the News

Two die in 6.5 magnitude Earthquake near San Lois Obispo California

Earthquake triggers mudslides

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003

California, 2003

San Andreas Fault

Page 4: VII. Earthquakes

Earthquake Bam, Iran

A Magnitude 6.5 Earthquake hits a stone- and mud-house city of 100,000 in Iran December 26, 2003 30,000 Dead 30,000 Refugees

US sends aid and releases sanctions

Relations improved

Photos from AP

Page 5: VII. Earthquakes

Geological Hazards Related to Earthquakes

Landslides

Volcanoes

Mudslides Tsunamis

Page 6: VII. Earthquakes

B: Sources of Seismic Energy

Elastic Rebound Buildup of elastic energy

during elastic strain Sudden release due to

slippage along a fault or brittle rupture

Page 7: VII. Earthquakes

Anatomy of an Earthquake

Fig. 8.35

Focus: Source of energy Epicenter: Location directly above focus at the surface

(ground motion is greatest) Fault Trace: Shows intersection of fault and the surface

of the land Fault Scarp: Indicates vertical motion of fault

Page 8: VII. Earthquakes

Propagation of Seismic Energy

Body Waves travel through the earths interior (crust, mantle, core) P wave: Compression

and expansion of rock S Wave: Shearing motion

of particles

Fig. 8.42

Page 9: VII. Earthquakes

Propagation of a P-Wave

Page 10: VII. Earthquakes

Propagation of Seismic Energy

Body Waves travel through the earth’s interior (crust, mantle, core) P wave: Compression

and expansion of rock S Wave: Shearing

motion of particles Surface Waves

Page 11: VII. Earthquakes

Propagation of an S-Wave

Page 12: VII. Earthquakes

Propagation of Surface Waves

Surface Waves travel along the earth’s surface Love Wave: Lateral

movement of the surface Rayleigh Wave: Rolling

movement of the surface (similar to an ocean wave)

Page 13: VII. Earthquakes

Propagation of a Surface Wave

Page 14: VII. Earthquakes

Propagation of a Surface Wave

Page 15: VII. Earthquakes

Recording Earth Motion Seismograph:

An instrument that measures the horizontal or vertical motion of Earth’s surface

Seismograms: The plot of the motion

Page 16: VII. Earthquakes

Measuring Velocity of Seismic waves

Because the P wave travels faster the the S wave

The S-P interval increases with distance

Time of EarthquakeTime of Earthquake

Page 17: VII. Earthquakes

Reading a Seismogram Ground motion vs. Time

Each tick mark is 1 minute P-S Time interval indicates distance to epicenter

First P waveArrival

First S waveArrival First Surface wave

P-S Interval

See Fig. 8.44

Page 18: VII. Earthquakes

Time-Distance Relationships

Use P-S interval to determine distance to focus

See Fig. 8.45

Distance from focus (Kilometers)

Page 19: VII. Earthquakes

Seismic Waves and Velocities P-waves

= ( + ¾): Bulk modulus

: Mod. of rigidity : Density

S-waves

= /

Body Waves and Surface Waves

Page 20: VII. Earthquakes

Locating the Epicenter

Triangulation using 3 seismograph stations

Depth can be determined with four or more stations

Page 21: VII. Earthquakes

Finding the Depth of Earthquakes

Using 4 or more seismograph stations

Seismicity of the Pacific Rim 1975-1995

Depth(km)

03370

300

150

500

800

Shallow quakes at mid ocean ridges (<33km) and

Oceanic trenches Deep quakes over

the subduction zone (>70 km)

Page 22: VII. Earthquakes

Earthquakes, Plate Interior

New MadridFault Zone Faults activated by

crustal warping Bowling Green

Fault Largest Earthquake

on the N. American Continent

Page 23: VII. Earthquakes

New Madrid Earthquake, 1811

Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale Subjective

observations of Damage and Ground motion

Is not a quantitative measure

Page 24: VII. Earthquakes

Earthquake Intensity Scales

Modified Mercalli Scale Subjective observations of

Damage and Ground motion

Is not a quantitative measure Richter Scale

Indicates Ground Motion Amplitude Logarithmic (e.g., 6 is ten times stronger than 5) Does not directly indicate energy or destruction

Page 25: VII. Earthquakes

Earthquakes around the World

Page 26: VII. Earthquakes

Assessing Risk“Major Quake Likely to

Strike San Francisco Bay Region Between 2003 and 2032”

• Assessing Risks• Avoiding Risks• Preventing Damage• Predicting Impact

Geologic Hazards

Page 27: VII. Earthquakes

Seismic Risk Analysis

Quake history (statistics) Locations of active faults Competency of surficial

materials (soil and rock) Ocean basin source

Tsunamis

Page 28: VII. Earthquakes

Solomon Islands Earth Quake and Tsunami 4-1-07

Page 29: VII. Earthquakes
Page 30: VII. Earthquakes
Page 31: VII. Earthquakes
Page 32: VII. Earthquakes
Page 33: VII. Earthquakes
Page 34: VII. Earthquakes

Profiling Earth’s Interior

Velocities of seismic waves vs depth Fig. 19.19 & 20

Page 35: VII. Earthquakes

Imaging Earth’s Interior

P and S waves are refracted (bent) within the earth

S waves do not travel through fluids

Fig. 9.21