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Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition
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Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

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Page 1: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

Understanding Earth

Chapter 13:Earthquakes

Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company

Grotzinger, Jordan

Press and Siever

Fifth Edition

Page 2: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.
Page 3: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

Concepts

• Earthquake • Stress• Strain• Elastic Rebound Theory• Epicenter• Foreshocks, aftershocks• P, S and Surface waves (Love and Rayleigh)• Moment Magnitude• Earthquake Intensity• Tsunami• First Motion

Page 4: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

An earthquake is caused by a sudden rupture (break) of the earth

An earthquake generates vibrations that travel through the earth, a.k.a earthquake waves

What is an Earthquake??

Page 5: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

1906

Page 6: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

Why do Earthquakes happen?

•Plate Motion

Page 7: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

How do earthquakes occur?

Elastic Rebound Theory is one explanation of how earthquakes take place.

Page 8: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

Elastic Rebound Theory

•Pressure or stress, builds up in the rock, much like a bending rubber eraser in your hands.

•You can break a rubber eraser if the pressure or stress you apply to it exceeds the natural strength of the rubber.

Page 9: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

Elastic Rebound Theory

•There are two important concepts you should be aware of. Stress in earth sciences refers to the pressure the rock experiences and strain is the actual damage or resultant deformation that we can measure.

•While the pressure builds up in the rock the rock DOES deform or strain. However, it does so elastically. That is if you release the rock from under stress it will BOUNCE back without any signs of damage. Normal rocks are usually only able to take a small (1-2%) of elastic strain. Stretching or thinning beyond 1-2% can cause permanent damage.

Page 10: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

Elastic Rebound Theory

•When the rock breaks or ruptures some of the energy goes into breaking the rock and a lot of it goes into moving the surround rocks.

•The rupture itself may remain buried, invisible underground (a blind fault). A rupture may or may not reach the surface.

•After the stress or pressure is release the rock seals ahd again starts to accumulate stress.

Page 11: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.
Page 12: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

Elastic Rebound Theory

•Ruptures or breaks in the rock are planar cracks that grow in all directions

•The rupture itself may remain buried, invisible underground (a blind fault). A rupture may or may not reach the surface.

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Page 16: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.
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Page 18: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

Foreshocks and Aftershocks are smaller earthquakes that precede and postdate the main shock.

What is a foreshcok or aftershock depends on when the main shock comes. But, this is really only known AFTER the big earthquake occurs!

Page 19: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.
Page 20: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

A seismograph is a tool that measure ground motion.

During the 1988 Auburn-LSU football game LSU scored a late and winning touchdown. The crowd cheered so loudly that the “earthquake game” made local history because the ground motion appeared on the LSU seismograph.

The “EARTHQUAKE GAME” -- 1988

Page 21: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

A seismograph consists of a real or virtual mass that is so large that it moves totally out of “sync” with the frequency of the ground motion, that is as IF IT WERE STILL. The mass is not actually still but its large inertia allows the faster motions of the earthquake groundshake to be registered accurately.

Seismograph

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Page 23: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

3 Types of Earthquake waves

• (P and S) When an earthquake occurs it starts at depth, in the BODY of the earth. At depth there are only two types of particle motion possible. (P and S waves) P and S waves are known as BODY waves because they always originate inside the earth. These are not the most damaging but they are the first to be detected because they travel at very fast speeds ( e.g. >6000 m/s.)

Page 24: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

3 Types of Earthquake waves

• P waves are the fastest, and first waves to arrive. S waves are the second fastest (~50%) and Surface waves (45%) are the slowest of the three major types of earthquake waves.

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--Image 1Particle Motion

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--Image 2Particle Motion

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--Image 3Particle Motion

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--Image 4Particle Motion

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--Image 5Particle Motion

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3 Types of Earthquake waves

• (Surface) The most damaging earthquake vibrations occur when the P and S waves reach the surface. At the surface they convert into horizontal S waves and a combination of vertical S and P waves called Rayleigh waves.

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The focus of an earthquake is the origin at depth of that earthquake. The closest place on the surface of the earth to the focus is called the epicenter.

An epicenter is located by triangulating between 3 or more seismograph stations, using the arrival times of two or more of the 3 types of earthquake waves.

Page 37: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.
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Size of an Earthquake

An earthquake size can be determined qualitatively or quantitatively and there is an equivalence between the two types of scales.

Page 41: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

Size of an Earthquake

(1) The Modified Mercalli Intensity scale describes the perceived intensity and damage, in 12 degrees, of the shaking and is useful when there are no seismographs, as in historical earthquakes (e.g. New Madrid 7.5, 1811, Missouri). Damage depends on whether there are people to witness the earthquake effect and on local conditions.

Page 42: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.
Page 43: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.
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Page 45: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

Size of an Earthquake

(2) The quantitative measure of the strength of an earthquake is the moment magnitude. Moment magnitude is proportional to the logarithm of the area faulted and seismic energy released during the rupture. It can be measured directly from the seismograms.

Page 46: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.
Page 47: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

Earthquakes generate different first motions in different directions depending on the type of fault that generates the earthquake.

•A first motion for a normal fault in a horizontal direction is OUT from the fault during the rupture. These tend to occur along divergent plate margin boundaries.

ACTIVE FAULTS GENERATE EARTHQUAKES (1)

Page 48: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.
Page 49: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

Earthquakes generate different first motions in different directions depending on the type of fault that generates the earthquake.

•A first motion for a thrust fault in a horizontal direction is IN to the fault during the rupture. These tend to occur along convergent plate margin boundaries.

ACTIVE FAULTS GENERATE EARTHQUAKES (2)

Page 50: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.
Page 51: Understanding Earth Chapter 13: Earthquakes Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman & Company Grotzinger, Jordan Press and Siever Fifth Edition.

•A first motion for a strike-slip fault in a horizontal direction is IN to the fault in certain orientations and OUT from the fault in other orientations. The first motion changes every 90 degrees around the epicenter.

ACTIVE FAULTS GENERATE EARTHQUAKES (3)

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