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CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994...

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CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA
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Page 1: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

CHAPTER 6

EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA

Page 2: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994

• Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface

• Shaking lasted about 15 sec

• Killed 57 people, collapsed freeways, parking structures, and more than 3000 buildings

• Caused about $40 billion in property damage

Case History: Northridge Quake

Page 3: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Chapter 6 Opening Figure

Page 4: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Violent ground-shaking phenomenon by the sudden release of strain energy stored in rocks

• One of the most catastrophic and devastating hazards

• Globally, most earthquakes are concentrated along plate boundaries

• USGS estimates about 1 million quakes annually

• Millions of people killed and billions of dollars in damage by catastrophic earthquakes

Earthquakes

Page 5: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

SelectedMajor

Earthquakes

Page 6: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Stress and strain

• Stress: A force exerted per unit area within rocks or other Earth materials

• Strain: Deformation (size, shape, and orientation) of rock materials caused by stress

• Rock strength: Rock’s ability to withstand a magnitude level of stress before rupture

• Earthquake: strain beyond rock strength

Causes for Earthquakes (1)

Page 7: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Earthquake: Sudden release of strain energy caused by rock rupture (through faulting)

• Earthquakes induced by human activities Much smaller magnitude Reservoir-induced earthquakes Deep waste disposal and earthquakes

example: chemical waste pumped into ground beneath Rocky Mountain Arsenal Nuclear explosions

Causes for Earthquakes (2)

Page 8: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Human Induced EarthquakesFigure 6.25a

Page 9: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.25b

Page 10: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Richter scale: The amplitude of ground motion Increasing one order in magnitude, a tenfold

increase in amplitude

• Moment magnitude scale Measuring the amount of strain energy released Based on the amount of fault displacement Applicable over a wider range of ground

motions than the Richter scale

• Earthquake energy: Increase one order in magnitude, about a 32-times increase in energy

Earthquake Magnitude Scale

Page 11: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Earthquake Magnitude Scale

Page 12: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Modified Mercalli ScaleModified Mercalli Scale 12 divisions Qualitative severity measurement of damages

and ground movement Based on ground observations, instead of

instrument measurement Scale depending on earthquake’s magnitude,

duration, distance from the epicenter, site geological conditions, and condition of infrastructure (age, building code, etc.)Often reported by individuals making observations, not measurements!

Earthquake Intensity Scale

Page 13: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.
Page 14: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Most earthquakes are concentrated along plate boundaries, and nearly all catastrophic earthquakes are shallow earthquakes

• Divergent plate boundary: Shallow earthquakes

• Transform plate boundary: Shallow to intermediate earthquakes

• Convergent plate boundary: Wide zone of shallow, intermediate, and deep earthquakes; 80% of seismic energy released along the earthquake zone around the Pacific rim

Plate Boundary and Earthquakes

Page 15: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Map of global seismicity

Figure6.7

Plate Boundary and Earthquakes

Page 16: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• 1811–1812 New Madrid earthquake Nearly destroyed the town of New Madrid Killed unknown number of people Rang church bells as far away as Boston Forests flattened Estimated magnitude >8.0

• 1886 Charleston earthquake (M 7.5) Killed 60 people Damaged or destroyed most buildings of the city Impacted area beyond 1000 km (620 mi)

Major Intraplate Earthquakes

Page 17: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.8a

Page 18: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.8b

Page 19: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• FaultsFaults Fault types (normal, reverse, thrust, and strike-

slip fault) Mapping faults: Surface fault and buried

subsurface fault Fault activity (active, potentially active, and

inactive faults) Fault-related tectonic creep Global plate boundaries, regional and local faults

Earthquake Processes

Page 20: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.10TYPES of FAULTS

Strike Slip (right or leftLateral)

Reverse FaultHanging wall “up”(compressional)

Normal FaultHanging wall “down”(extensional)

Page 21: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Earthquake’s focus and epicenter

• Seismic wave propagation outward from the focus

• P wave: Compressional waves, travel fastest through all physical states of media

• S wave: Shear waves, travel slower than P waves, but faster than surface waves, only propagate through solid materials

• Surface waves: Moving along Earth’s surface, travel slowest, but cause most of the damage

Seismic Waves

Page 22: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.3

Page 23: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.13

3 Types of wavesP waves compressional, fastest, travel through solids and liquidsS waves, perpendicular ndicular motion, travel through solids, not liquids, slower, arrive after PSurface waves (R), cause of most rolling ground motion, slowest

Page 24: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Seismograph or seismometer: device to record seismic waves

• Seismogram: the record of an earthquake

• Amplitude of seismic waves: Amplitude of ground vibration

• First arrival of seismic waves Determine the time of earthquake Distance to epicenter from a seismograph based

on the difference in arrival time betweenP waves and S waves

Measuring Seismic Waves

Page 25: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.14a

Page 26: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Three wave types recorded:Figure 6.14c

Page 27: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.14d

THREE seismic stationsRequired to locate an epicenter

Page 28: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Seismic waves travel differently through different rock materials

• Propagate faster through dense and solid rocks

• Material amplification: Intensity (amplitude of vertical movement) of ground shaking more severe in unconsolidated materials

• Seismic energy attenuated more and propagated less distance in unconsolidated materials

Material Amplification

Page 29: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.16

Page 30: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Mexico City EarthquakeFigure 6.17a

Page 31: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Mexico City 1985: City built on ancient lake depositsFigure 6.17b

Page 32: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Ground motion is related to the amplitude of seismic waves and its acceleration

• Measured by accelometers in terms of the acceleration of gravity

• Both vertical and horizontal accelerations

• M 6.0 to M 6.9 can have 0.3 g to 0.7 g accelerations

• Structure designs target to withstand 0.6 g to 0.7 g

Ground Acceleration

Page 33: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Faulting and elastic rebound

• Stages of earthquake cycle Inactive and aftershock stage Stress accumulation stage Foreshocks Main shock (major earthquake)

• Earthquake cycle over time: Recurrence intervals

• Earthquake cycle in space: Seismic gaps

Earthquake Cycles

Page 34: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.24Earthquake Cycle:Undeformed rock

Stress (created by a force)

Strain (change in shape)

Rupture followed by

Elastic rebound(rock returns to original shapeBut may be displaced horizontally,Vertically, or both

Page 35: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Primary effects Ground shaking, tilting, and ground rupture Loss of life and collapse of infrastructure

• Secondary effects Landslides, liquefaction, and tsunamis Fires, floods, and diseases

• Tertiary effects Social and psychological impacts

Effects of Earthquakes (1)

Page 36: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.19a

Page 37: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.19b1989 Loma Prieta“World Series Earthquake”Freeway collapse supports failed

Page 38: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Japanese word for “large harbor waves”• Triggered by earthquake, submarine volcanic

explosion, underwater landslide, asteroid impact• Recent tsunami examples

1960 Chile earthquake, killing 61 people in Hawaii 1964 Alaska earthquake, killing about 130 people in

AK and CA 1993 earthquake near Japan, killing 120 people in

Japan 1998 Papua New Guinea earthquake, killing more

than 2100 people 2004 Indonesian earthquake, killing about 250,000

people

Effects of Earthquakes: Tsunami

Page 39: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.29

Page 40: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.Aa

Page 41: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Shallow Earthquake triggered tsunami as ocean floor was displaced upward

Figure 6.Ab

Page 42: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.B

Page 43: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.Ca

Page 44: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.Cb

Page 45: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Pacific Warning System failed to warn of the tsunami. New warning system being set up in Indian Ocean

Figure 6.30

Page 46: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Earthquake risks Probabilistic methods for a given magnitude or

intensity Earthquake risk of an area Earthquake risk of a fault segment

• Seismic hazard maps

• Conditional probabilities for future earthquakes

Earthquake Risks

Page 47: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.31a

Page 48: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Long-term prediction Earthquake hazard risk mapping

• Short-term prediction (forecast) Frequency and distribution pattern of foreshocks Deformation of the ground surface: Tilting,

elevation changes Emission of radon gas Seismic gap along faults Abnormal animal activities?

Earthquake Prediction

Page 49: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Figure 6.31bRisk variesAlong theSan AndreasFault in Californiadepending onActivity along theFault, whetherThere is fault creep To relieve theStrain, or whetherThere is a seismicGap where strainIs building

Page 50: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

Along the active Anatolian Fault in northern Turkey, densely populated cities are at risk as fault activity migrates

west over time. Figure 6.32

Page 51: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Hazard Reduction Programs Develop a better understanding of the source and

processes of earthquakes

Determine earthquake risk potential

Predict effects of earthquakes: this will vary By ground type, structural properties, and

population density

Apply research results

Response to Earthquake Hazards (1)

Page 52: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Adjustments to earthquake activitiesAdjustments to earthquake activities Site selection for critical facilities: power Plants, waste disposal, schools, hospitals

Structure reinforcement and protection Engineering and building codes for homes, bridges, skyscrapers Land-use regulation and planning Consideration of location of populations where possible away from faults, reservoirs, historically damaged areas

Emergency planning and management: Insurance and relief measures Communication, utilities, fire control, water, transportion

Response to Earthquake Hazards (2)

Page 53: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Technically feasible: only about a minute warning

• Network of seismometers, sensing the first earthquake motion and sending a warning to critical facilities and public

• Warning system Not a prediction tool Can create a false alarm

• Better prediction and better warning system?

Earthquake Warning Systems

Page 54: CHAPTER 6 EARTHQUAKES AND RELATED PHENOMENA. Struck the Los Angeles area on January 17, 1994 Initiated on a steep fault surface 18 km (11 mi) below surface.

• Public education and preparedness for the earthquake potential, even psychologically

• Pre-earthquake planning: what to do when struck

• During-earthquake: understand the situation and formulate a good strategy

• Post-earthquake emergency response

• Better engineering of structural designs to minimize the future hazard risks

Perception of the Earthquake Hazard


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