Faults, Earthquakes & Volcanoes

Post on 14-Jan-2016

40 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

Faults, Earthquakes & Volcanoes. 56. Faults. Surface along which rocks move when they pass their elastic limit and break. 56. Earthquake. Vibrations produced when rocks break along a fault. 56. Normal Fault. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript

Faults, Earthquakes & Volcanoes

Faults

Surface along which rocks move when they pass their elastic limit and break

56

Earthquake

Vibrations produced when rocks break along a fault

56

Normal Fault

Break in rock caused by tension forces, where rock above the fault surface moves down relative to the rock below

56

Reverse Fault

Break in rock caused by compressive forces, where rock above the fault surface moves upward relative to the rock below

56

Strike-Slip Fault

Break in rock caused by shear forces, where rocks move past each other without much vertical movement

56

Primary (P) – wave

Seismic wave that moves rock particles back-and-forth in the same direction that the wave travels

56

Secondary (S) – wave

Seismic wave that moves rock particles at right angles to the direction of the wave

56

Whose FAULT is it?

• STRIKE-SLIP– Side-to-side motion– Happens at TRANSFORM boundaries– Ex. San Andreas Fault

Fault Surface

57

Whose FAULT is it?

• NORMAL– Hanging wall moves down– Happens at DIVERGENT boundaries

Fault Surface

57

Whose FAULT is it?

• REVERSE (aka THRUST)– Hanging wall moves up– Happens at CONVERGENT boundaries

Fault Surface

57

Earthquakes!

• A seismic wave is a wave generated by an earthquake. • There are 3 types of waves:–Primary waves (P-waves)–Secondary waves (S-waves)–Surface waves

58

Earthquakes!

• Focus is the point BELOW the Earth’s surface where seismic waves start• Epicenter is the point on earth’s

SURFACE directly above the focus

58

Earthquakes!

• Liquefaction occurs when wet soil acts more like a liquid during an earthquake

58

Earthquakes!

• Tsunami is a seismic sea wave that begins over an earthquake focus and can be destructive when it hits the shore

58

Where do they occur?

• http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/map/

Earthquake Facts59

Inner core

Outer core

Mantle

CrustFOCUS

EPICENTER

Surface wave

P-wave

S-wave

59

Earthquake Facts

• An earthquake is the vibration, sometimes violent, of the Earth’s surface that follows a release of energy in the Earth’s crust

59

Earthquake Facts

• P-waves push tiny particles of Earth material directly ahead of them or displace the particles behind their line of travel.

• Only P-waves travel through the Earth’s molten core.

How do we know?

59

Earthquake Facts

• S-waves displace materials at right angles.

• They cannot move through the core and are slower than P-waves

How do we know?

59

Earthquake Facts

• Surface waves, which travel along the Earth’s surface, create the most noticeable damage (they are the slowest)

59

Measuring an Earthquake

• The vibrations produced by earthquakes are detected, recorded, and measured by instruments called a seismograph

59

Measuring an Earthquake

• We need 3 seismograph station readings to find the focus and epicenter of an earthquake

59

Measuring an Earthquake

• Richter Scale, is a scientific measure of how much energy was released into the Earth

59

Measuring an Earthquake

• Modified Mercalli Scale, is an observational measure of how people experience an earthquake

• Mercalli Scale Online

59

VOLCANOES!

Two Types of Eruptions

• Violent/Explosive• Quiet/Flowing

60

Trapped Gas

• Water vapor and carbon dioxide are trapped in magma.

• At low pressure, they escape quietly when they reach the surface

• At high pressure, they escape violently when they reach the surface

60

Magma Composition

• Basaltic – less silica and very fluid, produces quiet eruptions• Granitic – lots of silica, high water

vapor content, and very thick, produces very violent eruptions

60

Forms of Volcanoes

• Shield• Cinder Cone• Composite

60

Shield Volcanoes

• Formed by quiet eruptions • Basaltic lava builds up in flat layers• Gently sloping slides • For example, Hawaii!

60

Cinder Cone Volcano

• Formed by explosive eruptions• Granitic lava thrown high into the air • Lava cools into different sizes of

tephra or ash• Steep-sided,

loose slopes

60

Composite Volcano

• A mix of the two types • Quiet or violent• Basaltic or granitic• Steep or gentle slopes• Layered with tephra or ash

60

Parts of a Volcano60

Dike

• Magma squeezed into VERTICAL cracks

61

Sill

• Magma squeezed into HORIZONTAL cracks

61

Ring of Fire

• Region around the Pacific Ocean with frequent earthquakes and volcanoes

61

Hot Spot

• Isolated volcano not caused by plate tectonics

61

Caldera

• Large crater caused by a violent volcanic eruption

61

top related