Table of Contents - Mr. Tobin`s Earth Science Class
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Transcript Table of Contents - Mr. Tobin`s Earth Science Class
Title: 19.1 Forces Within Earth
Page #:
Date: 6/6/2013
Students
will be able to define stress and
strain as the apply to rocks.
Students will be able to distinguish
among the three types of movement of
faults.
Students will be able to contrast three
types of seismic waves.
Fracture: The
texture or general
appearance of the freshly broken surface
of a mineral.
Main
Idea
Pg. 528
Faults: Form
when forces acting on
a rock exceed the rock’s strength.
Stress
&
Strain
Pg. 528
Stress
and Strain:
• Earthquakes are the result of
movement of Earth’s crust, produced
by plate tectonics.
• Stress: Total force acting on crustal
rocks pre unit of area.
Plates move gradually.
Stress builds up over time.
Stress builds up over time and eventually rocks will break.
Stress
Pg. 528
3
Kinds of Stress:
1. Compression: Stress that decreases
the volume of a material.
2. Tension: Stress that pulls material
apart.
3. Shear: Stress that causes material to
twist.
Strain
Pg. 528
Strain: The
deformation of
materials in response to stress.
Earthquakes: Result
when Stress
and Strain reach a critical point.
Pg. 529
Types of
Strain
Elastic
Deformation: When
material is compressed, bent, or
stretched.
• Occurs from low stress.
• Material returns to normal when
stress is removed.
Plastic
Deformation: Permanent
deformation.
• Occurs at high stress (passed elastic
limit.
• Deformation stays when stress is
removed.
Deformation of Rocks.
When rocks bounce
back the deformation
is elastic. When rocks
are deformed
permanently the
deformation is plastic.
Pg. 529
Types of
Strain
Most
materials show both elastic
and plastic deformation.
As pressure builds up, elastic limit
increases.
As temperature increases, stress is
reduced.
Pg. 529
Faults
Faults: Any
fracture or system of
fractures along which Earth
moves.
• A weak spot in the crust.
Fault
Plane: Surface along which
Earth moves.
• Can be horizontal to vertical.
Pg. 530
Faults
Reverse
and Normal Faults:
Reverse Fault: Forms from
compression, one piece of crust
gets pushed up.
• Convergent plate boundaries.
Normal
Fault: Form from tension
pulling two pieces of crust apart
and one piece of crust slips down.
Reverse Fault
Pg. 531
Faults
Strike-Slip
Fault: Caused by
horizontal shear.
• Two pieces of crust move in opposite
directions and rub past each other.
• Example: San Andreas fault.
Normal Fault
Reverse Fault
Strike-Slip Fault
Pg. 532
Waves
1.
2.
Earthquake Waves:
3 Types of Seismic Waves:
Primary Wave: P-Waves. Squeeze and
push rocks in direction in which wave
is traveling.
Secondary Wave: S-Waves. Slower than
p-waves. Rocks move at right angles
in relation to direction of waves.
Both P and S waves pass through
Earth’s interior.
Pg. 532
Waves
Earthquake Waves:
Surface Wave: Slowest type of
wave. Travel only along Earth’s
surface.
3.
•
•
Move up and down and side to side.
Cause the most destruction
because the are the shortest to pass
an area.
Surface Wave.
Pg. 533
Waves
Generation of Seismic Waves:
Focus: Point where waves originate,
result of failure of crustal rocks.
Epicenter: Point on Earth’s surface
directly above the focus.
• Surface waves originate and spread
out from epicenter.