Transcript File

Chapter 5: Earthquakes
Section: 1: Forces inside Earth
Objectives:
1.
2.
3.
Explain how earthquakes result from buildup of
energy in rocks
Describe how compression, tension, and shear
forces make rocks move along faults
Distinguish among normal, reverse, and strikeslip faults
Rough Outline
I.
II.
Earthquake Causes
A. Fault Formation
B. What Causes Faults
C. How Earthquakes Occur
Type of Faults
A. Normal Faults
B. Reverse Faults
C. Strike-Slip Faults
Richter
Desc
magni
r
tudes
i
p
t
i
o
n
Less than
2.0
Micr
2.0-2.9
Mino
r
Earthquake effects
Frequency of
occurrence
Microearthquakes, not felt.
About 8,000 per day
Generally not felt, but recorded.
About 1,000 per day
Often felt, but rarely causes damage.
49,000 per year (est.)
Noticeable shaking of indoor items, rattling noises. Significant damage
unlikely.
6,200 per year (est.)
o
3.0-3.9
4.0-4.9
Light
5.0-5.9
Mod
Can cause major damage to poorly constructed buildings over small regions.
e
At most slight damage to well-designed buildings.
r
a
t
e
800 per year
6.0-6.9
Stron Can be destructive in areas up to about 160 kilometers (100 mi) across in
g
populated areas.
120 per year
7.0-7.9
Majo
r
Can cause serious damage over larger areas.
18 per year
8.0-8.9
Grea
t
Can cause serious damage in areas several hundred miles across.
1 per year
1 per 20 years
Haitian Capital, Port-au-Prince
January 14, 2010
Earthquake measured 7.2
More than 100,000 died
Injured people outside the Villa
Creole the day after the earthquake
An aerial view of the UN headquarters in
Haiti shows how the office complex was
devastated by the earthquake
The Haitian national palace shows heavy damage following the
earthquake. The city's airport was operational, opening the way
for international relief aid to be ferried in
People search for survivors under the
rubble of a collapse building the day after
the quake
A women and her injured baby are seen at a
makeshift field hospital in Port-au-Prince
A shanty town on the outskirts of Port-au-Prince where thousands o
dwellings were either completely destroyed or badly damaged
Haitians set up impromtu tent cities thorough the
capital after the earthquake
Show Haiti Video from Favorites
Earthquake in Chili
February 27, 2010
Play two favorites news videos
Is it likely we will encounter an
earthquake of this magnetite?
NO
Take a look at the plate boundaries and take
a look at where we are located!!
Earthquake Causes
A.
Fault Formation
Elastic limit: the limit to how far
something can bend
Elastic Deformation: the forces that
cause rocks to bend and stretch.
Faults: Surface along which rocks move
when they pass their elastic limit and
break.
B.
What causes faults?
The forces inside the Earth cause plates
to move and shift – causes earthquakes.
Earthquake: The vibrations produced by
the breaking of rock
Earthquakes are most likely to happen
near the plates because most stress in
as boundaries where plates meet.
C.
How Earthquakes Occur
1. As plates move past each other their rough
surfaces sometimes catch.
2. Forces continue to build up where the rocks
are stuck
3. The stress causes rocks to bend and
change shape
4. When the rocks are stressed beyond their
elastic limit they break and move along a fault
to return to their original shape
5. THIS CREATES AN EARTHQUAKE!!!!!
Earth’s crust is in constant motion
Places stress on rocks
Rocks bend & stretch like a rubber
band
Break
Produces vibrations called
EARTHQUAKE
II. Types of Faults



Force – tension
Plates move
apart
Rock moves
downward
Sierra Nevadas
On the east
coast of
California



Force –
compression
Plates come
together
Rocks at the
surface are forced
up & over the ones
below the surface
Rocky Mountain National Park



Force – shear
Plates move sideways past each other
Rocks on either side move past each
other
San Andreas
Fault
http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/earthq3/