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Earthquakes-The Rolling Earth

An earthquake is a sudden, rapid shaking of the
Earth caused by the release of energy stored in rocks. This
energy can be built up and stored for many years and then released
in seconds or minutes. Many earthquakes are so small that they can
not be felt by humans. Some, on the other hand, have caused great
destruction and have killed hundreds of thousands of people. The
pink lines and dots on the map of the world above indicate the
regions of earthquake activity.
There are two major regions of earthquake activity. One is the
circum-Pacific belt which encircles the Pacific
Ocean, and the other is the Alpide belt which slices
through Europe and Asia. The circum-Pacific belt includes the West
coasts of North America and South America, Japan, and the
Phillipines.
Over one million earthquakes may occur each year on the Earth.
Most earthquakes last only seconds, but some large quakes may last
minutes. About 90% of all Earthquakes are produced at plate
boundaries where two plates are colliding, spreading apart, or
sliding past each other. When these plates move suddenly they
release an incredible amount of energy that is changed into wave
movement. Earthquake waves resemble sound and water waves in the
manor in which they move. It is these waves that roll through the
Earth's crust causing buildings to collapse, bridges to snap,
mountains to rise, the ground to fall, and in some cases the
ground to open up into huge cracks.
Why do earthquakes occur? Scientists believed that the
movement of the Earth's plates bends and squeezes the rocks at the
edges of the plates. Sometimes this bending and squeezing puts
great pressure on the rocks. Rocks are somewhat elastic, they can
be bent without breaking. Have you ever stretched a rubber band?
You know if you increase the tension too much though, the rubber
band will snap!! Rock layers act somewhat the same way, if the
pressures becomes too great the rock layer will break and move.
When this occurs the layers will move along a crack in the Earth's
crust called a fault or the release of energy will
cause a new fault line to be produced. This rupture of the rocks
and the resulting movement causes an earthquake.
This is an aerial photo of the San Andreas
fault line in California. The red arrows point to the crack in the
crust that is the surface fault. This fault is the boundary
between two huge plates, the North American plate and the Pacific
plate. The two plates are sliding past each other in opposite
directions. This type of plate boundary is called a transverse
boundary. A transverse boundary is actually a tear
in the Earth's crust. The black arrows represent the directions
that the two plates are traveling.
This fault line is perhaps the most
studied transverse boundary in the world. Many earthquakes each
year occur on the San Andreas fault which runs in California from
the Mexico border east of San Diego north to the San Francisco Bay
area. The next card shows the destruction that occurred during the
1971 San Fernando earthquake.

This aerial photograph shows
the destruction that occurred during the February 2, 1971 San
Fernando earthquake. The freeway bridge and road were extensively
damaged during this shaking of the crust.

When an earthquake occurs an area of the
crust will move very suddenly and with a great release of energy.
The point of the actual rock rupture is called the
focus . The focus is usually found far beneath the surface. The point
directly above the focus on the surface of the Earth is called the
epicenter.
When the rocks move suddenly they will
produce waves in the Earth's crust. These waves move out in all
directions and can produce widespread damage on the Earth's
surface.

When the rupture of the rock occurs the
release of energy causes seismic waves
to be
produced. Just as wind energy causes waves in water to move across
a lake or ocean, seismic waves move through the layers of the
Earth. These seismic waves are what produces the destruction that
can accompany an earthquake by heaving, shaking, and cracking the
ground as they pass through an area. The seismic waves spread out
in all directions from the focus.
Compression waves are one type of seismic
wave. They are the first to arrive at the surface of the Earth.
Because of this they are given another name,
P or Primary waves.
P waves are the fastest of the seismic
waves. They travel at incredible speeds, 14,000 m.p.h at the
surface to over 25,000 m.p.h. through the core of the Earth. P
waves are even able to pass all the way through the entire Earth.
When P waves strike an object they push
and pull the object , like a train engine bumping into a railroad
car which then bumps into another and so on all the way through
the whole length of the train. This jackhammer movement is the
first sign that an earthquake is occurring.
As a wave passes through a house, the
house is pushed and pulled. If the house is not strong enough it
might collapse

Shear waves reach the
surface shortly after the P waves and are given the name
S
or Secondary waves. S waves travel at about half the speed
of P waves. They move objects in their paths in an up and down
motion in the direction that the wave is moving.
S waves can only move through solids and
because of this can travel only through the crust and mantle of
the Earth. When S waves strike the outer core, which is made of
liquid iron and nickel, the waves stop.

Surface waves
are the third
type of wave. These are the waves that produce the most
destruction. They originate from the arrival of P and S waves at
the surface. They are much slower than both P and S waves. Surface
waves are limited to travel along only the surface of the Earth,
just as waves in a body of water are limited to travel along only
the surface of the water.
There are two types of surface waves: Love
waves and Rayleigh waves.
Love
waves move in a
manner very similar to S waves but the movement to objects in it's
path is side to side instead of up and down. Rayleigh waves
travel much in the same way as waves in water. Rayleigh waves have
an almost circular pattern to its wave motion.

The Richter Magnitude is a
number that is used to measure the size of an earthquake. The magnitude is a measure of the strength of the seismic
waves that have been sent out from the focus. A scientist uses a
seismograph to determine the strength of the earthquake. A
seismograph is an instrument that measures the amount of
ground motion that an earthquake produces.
Each number on the Richter Scale
represents an earthquake that is ten times as powerful as the
number below it.
Examples:
An earthquake measuring 6 is ten
times stronger than a magnitude 5 quake. An earthquake of a
magnitude 9 is 10,000 times more powerful than a 5.
The strongest earthquake ever measured was
a 8.9 off of the coast of Ecuador in 1906. Earthquakes of 6 and
above are considered major quakes. Earthquakes of 7 and above have
the ability to do great damage and kill many people.

Each of the graphs on this page shows an
earthquake reading on a seismograph. The waves from an earthquake
sets a writing device in motion showing the magnitude and the
length of time that the earth is in motion during a quake.
The strength or magnitude is recorded in
the verical (up and down) lines. The stronger the quake the longer
the lines will be drawn on the graph.
The duration (length of time) that a quake
occurs is represented in the horizontal lines. The duration of the
earthquake in the top graph shows a quake lasting about 40
seconds. Each box on the graph is a one minute time duration. The
bottom earthquake lasted about one minute and 20 seconds.
Which earthquake was stronger??

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