Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in...

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Earthquake Earthquake Science Science (Seismology) (Seismology)

Transcript of Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in...

Page 1: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

EarthquakEarthquake Sciencee Science

(Seismology)(Seismology)

Page 2: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

Announcements for next week’s labMagnetometer survey,

working in groups

Please bring: small notebook pen graph paper umbrella (if raining)Be prepared to remove

all metal (watches, belt buckles, jewelry, etc.)

Page 3: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

March 28, 1964 - AlaskaM = 9.1 Up to 12 m vertical displacement

Page 4: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.
Page 5: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.
Page 6: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

October 17, 1989 - Loma Prieta, CAM = 6.9 $6 B in property damage

Page 7: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

January 17, 1994 - Northridge, CAMw = 6.7 > $15 B in property damage

Page 8: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

January 17, 1995 - Kobe, JapanMw = 6.7 5000 dead, > $200 B in property damage

Page 9: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

August 17, 1999 - Izmit, TurkeyM = 7.4 15,700 casualties

Page 10: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

December 26, 2004 - SumatraM = 9.15 250,000 deaths

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• What are earthquakes? What are earthquakes? (… and what earthquakes (… and what earthquakes are not!)are not!)

• Earthquake Earthquake phenomenology (… fault, phenomenology (… fault, epicentre, seismic waves, epicentre, seismic waves, magnitude)magnitude)

Page 12: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

4 mSan AndreasSan Andreas

FaultFault

Fence offset during the Great Earthquake (1906)

Earthquake: A sudden, violent dislocation in the subsurface caused by stress buildup on a fault.

Page 13: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

An earthquake is not:… a giant crack that opens up and swallows buildings whole

…like an underground explosion

… defined by a point in space or time

… easily predictable

Page 14: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

Fault: A surface across which two blocks can move relative to each other.

Page 15: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

San Andreas Fault Trace, California

Page 16: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

Focus: The location on a fault where earthquake rupture initiates.

Focal depth

Page 17: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

http://www.iris.iris.edu/sumatra/

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Hypocentre: The calculated position of an earthquake focus.

Hypocentre (almost synonymous)

Page 19: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

Epicentre: That point on the Earth's surface directly above the hypocentre.

EpicentralDistance

Page 20: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

Surface waves

Body waves

Seismic Waves 101

P waves

S waves

Love waves

Rayleigh waves

Primary (or compressional)

Secondary (or shear)

Fast

Slow

Page 21: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

www.iris.edu

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2005/09/26 01:55:35 85.4 km depth

Northern Peru, Magnitude 7.5

PS

SS

Rayleigh

ELFO

6.6 min

Page 23: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

Estimating Epicentral Distance ()

P

S

t

For a distant earthquake:

~ 1000 t - 1500

t in minutes, in km

e.g., ~ 1000*6.6 - 1500 = 5100 km

Note: Just a crude estimate!

For a local earthquake:

~ 8 tt in seconds, in km

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Earthquake epicentresare located by triangulation

www.quakechasers.ca

Requires t from at least 3 stations

Page 25: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

Magnitude: A measure of the strength of an earthquake, as determined by seismographic observations.

Different magnitude formulas are used. Examples:

• Richter magnitude

• Surface-wave magnitude

Page 26: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

Small earthquakes happen often, but large earthquakes are infrequent...

http://www.em.gov.bc.ca/Mining/Geolsurv/Surficial/quake/eq2.htm

Page 27: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.
Page 28: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

MS = log10(A) + 1.656log10() + 1.818

Surface-wave magnitude formula(most common)

A = amplitude in microns (m)

= epicentral distance in degrees(divide by 111 to go from km to degrees)

Page 29: Earthquake Science (Seismology). Announcements for next week’s lab Magnetometer survey, working in groups Please bring: 4 small notebook 4 pen 4 graph.

672 m

~ (5100/111) ~ 46 degrees

MS = log10(A) + 1.656log10() + 1.818

= 7.4

Magnitude CalculationExample