CH. 14 Vocabulary test study guide

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Earthquakes.
Advertisements

Chapter 9 Earthquakes.
Chapter 11 Earthquakes.
Chapter Eleven Earthquakes.
Ch 15 Earthquakes I. Earthquake – the shaking of Earth’s crust caused by a release of energy; vibrations made from rocks breaking.
What is an Earthquake? Movement of the ground that occurs when rock inside the Earth pass their elastic limit, break suddenly, and experience elastic rebound.
Earthquakes Essential Question: How has earthquakes shaped our Earth?
Earthquakes.
Glencoe Chapter 9 ©2005 LikeScience.com. Faults Rocks break and move along surfaces called faults.
Earthquakes Chapter 19. Focus vs. Epicenter _________– where the rock breaks and seismic waves begin; can be at deep or shallow depths _________ – point.
Earthquakes The movement of the ground, caused by waves from energy released as rocks move along faults.
Chapter 11 Earthquakes Study Guide.
Earthquakes Chapter 2 book F page 44. Vocabulary for section 1 page 44 book F Stress Tension Compression Shearing Normal fault Reverse fault Strike-slip.
 stress -a force that acts on rock to change its shape or volume. 3 Types of Stress  tension -pulls on crust, stretching rock so it becomes thinner.
1 What is an earthquake? Simply put: An earthquake is the shaking of the earth. Free powerpoint template: 1.
STRESS – The amount of force exerted on a material.
QUIZ 10/21 1.What are Earthquakes? 2._____ is the deformation of a material caused by stress. 3.Describe tension stress. 4.Faulting causes rock to _________.
Chapter 11: Earthquakes. Forces Inside the Earth Fault Formation: There is a limit to how far rocks can bend or move without cracking. Up to a point,
Seismology.
Earthquakes. Define earthquake Large vibrations that move through rock or other Earth materials Movement of the ground that occurs when rocks inside the.
Earthquakes. earthquakes Earthquakes are natural vibrations of the ground caused by movement along gigantic fractures in Earth’s crust or by volcanic.
Ch.11 Earthquakes Earth Science.
EARTHQUAKES .
Earthquakes.
Earthquakes.
Standard S6E5: Students will understand how the distribution of land and oceans affects climate and weather. d: describe the processes that change rocks.
Earthquakes.
Students will identify the causes of earthquakes
Ground Deformation: Faulting and Folding Earthquakes and Mountain- Building.
Earthquakes.
Normal Faults What Happens? Type of Boundary? Picture Examples…
Chapter 14 Study Guide.
Earthquake Notes.
Measuring Earthquakes Chapter
Earthquakes Chapter 11.
Earthquakes.
Warmup 1. What is an earthquake’s location on a surface called?
Earthquakes & Plate Tectonics
Earthquakes Video:
Earthquakes!!!.
Earthquakes.
VIRTUAL EARTHQUAKE
Chapter 5 Earthquakes.
Earthquake Foldable.
Faults Fault Line.
Section 9-1 What happens once the elastic limit of a rock is passed? Where does this occur? Define earthquake. Describe the 3 types of forces. (p. 237)
Earthquakes Waves and Faults.
Earthquakes.
Earthquakes EARTHQUAKE 101.
Bellwork Clear everything off your desk except: P/P
Earthquakes.
Earthquakes.
Do Now Describe the last earthquake you can remember. (location, strength, time of day, how it felt, etc.) Where do earthquakes occur? Why do earthquakes.
Earthquakes Vocab.
Forces in Earth Earthquakes
Earth Shakes, Rattles, and Rolls
Chapter 2 Vocabulary Review
Goal 9 - Quaking, Shaking, Earth
Earthquakes.
Earth Science Notes Earthquakes.
Earthquakes Chapter 11.
Stress Tension Compression Shearing Normal Fault
Earthquakes.
Warmup 1. What is an earthquake’s location on a surface called?
Earthquakes.
Earthquakes.
Chapter 5.2 Earthquakes and seismic waves
Earthquakes.
You’re stressing me OUT!
Presentation transcript:

CH. 14 Vocabulary test study guide

Surface along which rocks move when they pass their elastic limit

fault

Measure of the energy released during an earthquake

magnitude

In an earthquake, the point below Earth’s surface where energy is released in the form of seismic waves

focus

Wave generated by an earthquake that travels through Earth

Seismic wave

Instrument used to register earthquake waves & record the time that each arrived

seismograph

Seismic wave that moves rock particles up and down in a backward rolling motion and side to side in a swaying motion

Surface wave

Seismic wave that moves rock particles back & forth in the same direction that the wave travels

Primary wave

Break in rock caused by tension forces, where rock above the fault surface moves down relative to the rock below the fault surface

Normal fault

Occurs when wet soil acts more like a liquid during an earthquake

Liquefaction

Seismic wave that moves rock particles at right angles to the direction of the wave

Secondary wave

Vibrations produced when rocks break along a fault

earthquake

Seismic sea wave that begins over an earthquake focus & can be highly destructive when it crashes on shore

tsunami

Break in rock caused by compressive forces, where rock above fault moves upward relative to the rock below the fault surface

Reverse fault

Break in rock caused by shear forces where rocks move past each other without much vertical movement

Strike-slip fault

Point on Earth’s surface directly above an Earthquake’s focus

epicenter