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More Earth Science

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More Earth Science. Landforms Earthquakes Seismic Waves Shadow Zone. Landforms. Mountains. A mass of rock rising more than 600 meters above the surrounding land Relief vs. Elevation. Types of Mountains. Fold Mountain. Fold Mountains. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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More Earth Science Landforms Earthquakes Seismic Waves Shadow Zone
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Page 1: More                 Earth  Science

More Earth Science

LandformsEarthquakesSeismic WavesShadow Zone

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Landforms

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Mountains

• A mass of rock rising more than 600 meters above the surrounding land

• Relief vs. Elevation

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Types of Mountains

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Fold Mountain

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Fold Mountains

• Usually made mostly of sedimentary rock folded by compression forces

• These are the tallest and most common of all mountains

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Examples of Fold Mountains

Appalachian Mountains

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Rocky Mountains

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Alps

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Himalaya Mountains

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Fault-Block Mountain

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Fault Block Mountain Ranges are cause by a series of normal faults

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Examples of Fault block Mountain

ranges

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Sierra Nevada Mountains, CA

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Grand Tetons, WY

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Wasatch Mountains, Utah

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When the Earth SHAKES

Earthquakes

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What causes earthquakes?

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• Volcanic eruptions can cause earthquakes but most earthquakes are caused by FAULTING

• These are often called TECTONIC earthquakes

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Theory VS. Law• A THEORY is a logical idea that has

not been proven directly but it often can be proved mathematically

• It is a working set of rules that define a body of knowledge

• A LAW is observable and can be proven- to a point. Nothing is 100% sure in a Universe as vast as ours

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Elastic Rebound Theory

The Elastic Rebound Theory was first proposed by American geologist Harry Fielding Reid after the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake

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Elastic Rebound

• The sudden release of progressively stored strain in rocks, resulting in movement along a fault

• After the stress becomes too great, the rock layers break, vibrating back and forth until eventually coming to a rest

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• As the rock layers are shaking back and forth they send out waves of vibration called Seismic Waves

• “Seismic” always has to do with earthquake activity

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Seismic Waves are waves of vibration sent out in all

directions from the FOCUS

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• FocusThe point below the surface where the rock layers break and move

• EpicenterThe point on the surface, directly above the focus. Where the greatest damage usually occurs

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Fault

Focus

Epicenter

Seismic Waves

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Measuring Earthquakes

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Charles Richter26 April 1900 –

30 September 1985

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Seismograph

A machine that measures earthquake (seismic) waves

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Zhang Heng seismograph

is almost 2000 yrs old

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Early Seismograph

Operates on the principle of Newton’s First Law

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SeismogramThe recorded information of earthquake

waves

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The Richter Scale is based on MAGNITUDE

Seismogram

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Each # is TEN TIMES larger than the # before it…

Magnitude 1

Magnitude 2

Magnitude 3

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Pennies as an example:Mag. 1 = 1 pennyMag. 2 = 10 penniesMag 3 = 100 penniesMag. 4 = 1000 penniesMag. 5 = 10,000 penniesMag. 6 = 100,000 penniesMag. 7 = 1,000,000 penniesMag. 8 = 10,000,000 penniesMag. 9 = 100,000,000 penniesMag. 10 = 1,000,000,000 pennies(that’s $10 million in pennies!!)

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Richter Magnitudes Earthquake Effects

Less than 3.5 Generally not felt 3.5-5.4 Often felt, little

damageUnder 6.0 Slight damage to

buildings6.1-6.9 Destructive to about

100 km from epicenter7.0-7.9 Major earthquake.

Can cause serious damage8 or greater Large earthquake.

Serious damage for hundreds of km

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Anatomy of a basic wave

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• Crest – the highest point on a wave (A, F)

• Trough – the lowest point on a wave (D, I)

• Amplitude – the distance between the midpoint & crest or trough

• Wavelength – distance between any two successive points on a wave

• Frequency - # of vibrations/ second (Hertz)

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Types of Seismic Waves

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Body Waves are waves that travel through the body of the earth

Surface waves only travel along the surface of earth

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Body Waves

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Primary WavesAKA P-Wave

• Type of Longitudinal Wave

• Causes back and forth motion

• Follows the same direction as the energy transfer

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P-Waves

• Type of COMPRESSIONAL wave (like sound)

• Will travel through solid, liquid or gas• Travels at: • 7.8 – 8.5 kps in mantle• 7.2 kps in oceanic crust• 3.5 kps in continental crust

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Primary Wave•http://sunshine.chpc.utah.edu/labs/seismic/surface.swf

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Secondary WaveAKA S-Wave

• Particle motion is perpendicular to direction of energy transfer

• Transverse or Shear Wave

• Will travel only through solids

• Travels 4 – 5 kps

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Secondary Wave•http://sunshine.chpc.utah.edu/labs/seismic/surface.swf

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Surface Waves

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• Two main types of surface waves:

• Love Wave

• Rayleigh Wave

• Recent evidence show s that L-Waves attenuate (gradually disappear) more slowly in older rock (eastern US) and more quickly in younger rock (western US)

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Love Wave•http://sunshine.chpc.utah.edu/labs/seismic/surface.swf

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Love Waves

• Love Waves travel less than 4 kps

• Move side-to-side; like a snake

• Cause the most damage

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Seismic Waves

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Seismogram with the P-Wave, S-Wave and L-Wave

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Seismic Risk in the US

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Triangulation

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Refraction

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Refraction of seismic waves within the Earth

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Zone between about 105 degrees & 145 degreesis the Shadow Zone

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105 degrees145 degrees

Focus

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Shadow Zone

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How Hawaiian Islands are formed


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