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GEOG 3251: Mountain Geog, summer 2010 Adina Racoviteanu

Mountain hazards: Earthquakes, volcanoes, landslides. GEOG 3251: Mountain Geog, summer 2010 Adina Racoviteanu. Objectives. Describe types of mountain hazards Relate earthquake activity to plate tectonics Define earthquake, focus and epicenter, types of waves

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GEOG 3251: Mountain Geog, summer 2010 Adina Racoviteanu

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  1. Mountain hazards: Earthquakes, volcanoes, landslides GEOG 3251: Mountain Geog, summer 2010 Adina Racoviteanu

  2. Objectives • Describe types of mountain hazards • Relate earthquake activity to plate tectonics Define earthquake, focus and epicenter, types of waves • Define landslides, lahars, mudslides

  3. 1.What is an earthquake? • Earthquake = Vibration of the Earth produced by the rapid release of energy • Seismic waves = Energy moving outward from the focus of an earthquake

  4. Epicenter = spot on Earth’s surface directly abovethe focus Focus = location of initial slip on the fault; where the earthquake originates Why do earthquakes occur? • Fractures, faults • Energy released and propagates in all directions as seismic wavescausing earthquakes

  5. Where do earthquakes occur? 1) Most earthquakes (90%) occur along the edge of oceanic and continental plates 2) Some along faults: normal, reverse, transform

  6. Seismic waves: forms • P-waves: • compressional, or push-pull waves • Propagate parralel to the direction in which the wave is moving • Move through solids, liquids • S-waves: • Called shear waves • Propagate the movement perpendicular to the direction in which the wave is moving • Surface waves (L-waves or long waves). • Complex motion • Up-and-down and side-to-side • Slowest • Most damage to structures, buildings

  7. Earthquake size: two ways to measure • Magnitude:Richter Scale • Intensity: Mercalli Scale

  8. 7 992 times more energy!! 31.5 times energy 6 1) Richter Scale • Measures the energy released by fault movement • related to the maximum amplitude of the S wave measured from the seismogram • Logarithmic-scale 5

  9. Frequency of Occurrence of Earthquakes

  10. Recent Earthquake Activity around the World

  11. Largest earthquake in the world • More than 2,000 killed, 3,000 injured, 2,000,000 homeless, and $550 million damage in southern Chile • tsunami caused 61 deaths • $75 million damage in Hawaii; • 138 deaths and $50 million damage in Japan; • 32 dead and missing in the Philippines; and $500,000 damage to the west coast of the United States. Chile : May 22, 1960 Magnitude 9.5

  12. Most Destructive Known Earthquakes on Record in the World

  13. India, Gujarat earthquakeJan 26, 2001

  14. Same year… Arequipa. S.Peru June 2001

  15. Jun 23, 2001 Magnitude 8.1 earthquake strikes Arequipa

  16. Earthquake damage • Ground Failure - constructions collapse • Fires - from broken gas and electrical lines • Landslides - EQ's triggered; occur in hilly/mountainous areas. • Liquefaction - water-saturated, unconsolidated materials flow • Tsunami (seismic sea waves; "tidal" waves) - can grow up to 65 m

  17. Landslides Turnnagin Heights,Alaska,1964 Source: National Geophysical Data Center

  18. Natural disasters in the Cordillera Blanca, Peru: Huascaran avalanche

  19. Favoring conditions • Major tectonic faults that are active • Marked glacierization • Geologically young, steep mountains • Pro-glacial lakes • Immediate vicinity of human settlements

  20. Mass wasting: types • Creep • Landslides: rock slides • Flows: avalanches, debris flow, mud flow • Rock falls

  21. Common mountain hazards

  22. Pokhara, Nepal (base of the Annapurnas)

  23. Lahars= debris flows associated with volcanic eruptions

  24. Landslide and Debris Flow (Mudslides): • masses of rock, earth, or debris saturated with water and moving down a slope • They are activated by: • storms, • earthquakes, • volcanic eruptions, • fires, • alternate freezing or thawing, • steepening of slopes by erosion or human modification.

  25. Avalanche: • similar in mechanism to landslide • it involves a large amount of ice, snow and rock falling quickly down the side of a mountain • ice builds in cornices or forms over a weaker layer of snow, creating the danger of an avalanche.

  26. ALPAMAYO Nev. Chacraraju

  27. Mt. HUASCARAN, PERU

  28. 1962 HUASCARAN AVY • Large snow year • 50 degree F increase in temp over a few minutes • Caused avalanche • 4,000 fatalities

  29. 1970 Avalanche • Triggered by 7.7 magnitude earthquake • Rock face failure • Incorporated 30 meters of snow and ice! • Moraines confined flow initially • Accelerated over a distance of 2.4 km • Became airborne at change of slope

  30. Landslides: May 30, 1970 Peru disaster Magnitude: 7.9 • A large mass of ice and rock slid from a vertical face on Nevado Huascaran, the highest peak in Peru • Debris reached a velocity of 280 km/hr • traveled 11 km horizontally in about 4 minutes at a mean velocity of 165 km/hr. • Buried the towns of Yungay and Ranrahirca, The death toll in both villages was 20,000.

  31. 1970 Earthquake that caused the Huascaran disaster killed about 40,000 people in Huaraz. Streets of Huaraz after the 1970 Earthquake. Adobe houses collapsed, killing people inside.

  32. The town of Huaraz flattened

  33. Huaraz today: a growing tourist town

  34. Rock avalanche deposit Debris flow deposit

  35. Yungay is now completely abandoned. Cemetery has a monument to the dead.

  36. Tomorrow’s lecture: Human sacrifice • Highly worshipped mountain; • stratovolcano • Coropuna is believed to contain Inca ruins and human sacrifices offered to the mountain deity.

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