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Earthquakes! OBJECTIVES Differentiate between Focus & Epicenter

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Presentation on theme: "Earthquakes! OBJECTIVES Differentiate between Focus & Epicenter"— Presentation transcript:

1 Earthquakes! OBJECTIVES Differentiate between Focus & Epicenter
Movement of the 3 Faults 3 Types of Waves Differentiate between magnitude & intensity.

2 What causes Earthquakes??
Movement of tectonic plates Volcanic eruptions Focus: Origin of the earthquake inside the earth. Epicenter: Point directly above the earthquake’s focus on the surface of the earth. Most earthquakes occur when rocks break deep within Earth, caused by stress on the rock.

3

4 Faults The resulting fracture where the plates separate is called a fault. 3 Types of Faults Normal Fault Reverse Fault Strike-Slip Fault

5 Normal Fault Result of plates moving apart.

6 Reverse Fault Result of plates moving together.

7 Strike-Slip Fault Result of plates sliding past each other.
Ex. San Andreas fault in California

8 Waves When the fault is formed, it releases built up energy in the form of seismic waves. Seismic Waves are the vibrations felt on the surface. 3 Types: P-Waves S-Waves Surface Waves

9 P-Waves Primary waves Rocks move back & forth under the surface.
Travel the fastest Travel through ANY material Can only travel in the Earth’s interior

10 S-Waves Secondary waves Rocks move up & down under the surface
Will only travel through solids Can only travel through the Earth’s interior. Slower than P-waves but faster than surface waves.

11 Surface Waves Rocks move up & down AND back & forth at the surface. (two directions) Can only travel on the Earth’s exterior

12 Measurement Seismometer: Instrument that detects & measures seismic waves Measures magnitude & Intensity.

13 Magnitude: Amount of energy released during an earthquake.
Intensity: The amount of damage done to the structures involved. Magnitude does NOT change with distance from the Earthquake. (Energy is energy!!) Intensity DOES change with distance. Farther away = Less intensity

14 Richter Scale Measures the magnitude of an Earthquake.
Ranges from 1 (weak)  10 (strong) Used mainly by the media.

15 Moment Magnitude Scale
Used by seismologists The best scale Can be used for ALL quakes – large or small, any distance near or far.

16 Moment Magnitude Scale Illustrated


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