1 / 38

Earthquakes

Earthquakes. An Earthquake is the sudden movement of the earth. It is caused by the abrupt release of strain that has accumulated over a long time. Earthquakes in History. Horses killed by a collapsing wall - San Francisco Earthquake 1906. San Francisco - 1906. Anchorage, Alaska - 1964.

lerato
Télécharger la présentation

Earthquakes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Earthquakes

  2. An Earthquake is the sudden movement of the earth • It is caused by the abrupt release of strain that has accumulated over a long time

  3. Earthquakes in History Horses killed by a collapsing wall - San Francisco Earthquake 1906

  4. San Francisco - 1906

  5. Anchorage, Alaska - 1964

  6. Where Earthquakes Occur

  7. Where Earthquakes Occur • Most Earthquakes occur at the boundaries where tectonic plates meet

  8. Where Earthquakes Occur

  9. How Earthquakes Happen • The crust may first bend, and then when stress exceeds the strength of the rocks, break and “snap” to a new position. • In the process, vibrations called “seismic waves” are generated.

  10. Seismic Waves

  11. Three Types of Faults Strike-Slip Thrust Normal

  12. Strike-slip Fault Example

  13. Strike-slip Fault Example 1906 San Francisco Earthquake

  14. Normal Fault Example Dixie Valley-Fairview Peaks, Nevada earthquake December 16, 1954

  15. Thrust Fault Example

  16. Severity of an Earthquake • The severity of an earthquake can be expressed in several ways:

  17. Magnitude • The measure of the amplitude of seismic waves • Expressed by the Richter Scale • Richter Earthquake Magnitudes Effects • Less than 3.5 Generally not felt, but recorded. • 3.5-5.4 Often felt, but rarely causes damage. • Under 6.0 At most slight damage to well-designed buildings. Can cause major damage to poorly constructed buildings over small regions. • 6.1-6.9 Can be destructive in areas up to about 100 kilometers across where people live. • 7.0-7.9 Major earthquake. Can cause serious damage over larger areas. • 8 or greater Great earthquake. Can cause serious damage in areas several hundred kilometers across.

  18. Magnitude – Richter Scale Scale about 3.0 Scale about 6.0 Scale about 9.0

  19. Intensity • A subjective measure that describes how strong a shock was felt at a particular location • Expressed by the Modified Mercalli Scale

  20. What Controls the Level of Shaking? • Magnitude • More energy released • Distance • Shaking decays with distance • Local soils • amplify the shaking

  21. Earthquake Effects - Ground Shaking Northridge, CA 1994

  22. Earthquake Effects - Ground Shaking

  23. Earthquake Effects - Ground Shaking KGO-TV News ABC-7 Loma Prieta, CA 1989

  24. Earthquake Effects - Ground Shaking Kobe, Japan 1995

  25. Earthquake Effects - Ground Shaking Kobe, Japan 1995

  26. Earthquake Effects - Surface Faulting Landers, CA 1992

  27. Earthquake Effects - Liquefaction Source: National Geophysical Data Center Niigata, Japan 1964

  28. Earthquake Effects - Landslides Turnnagin Heights,Alaska,1964

  29. Earthquake Effects - Fires Loma Prieta, CA 1989

  30. Earthquake Effects - Tsunamis 1957 Aleutian Tsunami

  31. Earthquake Effects - Tsunamis Sumatra –Andaman Earthquake/Tsunami BEFORE

  32. Earthquake Effects - Tsunamis

  33. Earthquake Effects - Tsunamis Sumatra –Andaman Earthquake/Tsunami AFTER

  34. Earthquake Effects - Tsunamis Sumatra –Andaman Earthquake/Tsunami AFTER

  35. Pacific-North American Plate Boundary

  36. The San Andreas Fault

  37. Did You Feel It? http://earthquake.usgs.gov

More Related