LabWrite for Middle School |
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LabWrite for Middle School - Earthquake Background
8th Grade SCOS Objective 3.04 Evaluate the forces which shape the lithosphere: Earthquakes
Use the information below and your chapter 11 in your textbook (p. 300-322) to answer the following questions on a separate sheet of paper. You will have thirty minutes to complete the questions. Be prepared to discuss your answers with the class.
You will need this information to complete the laboratory activity this week.
1. Choose one type of fault. Draw it and explain what it is. 2. Explain what an earthquake is. 3. Which type of seismic wave causes the most damage: P waves or S waves? Why? 4. Your teacher(s) will assign you a picture from pages 6-9. Give the probable events that caused the image you see by identifying the following. a) location of the picture. b) tectonic plates involved c) type of fault causing the earthquake d) seismic waves involved e) geology of the area seen in the picture
5. Choose 5 terms in bold that you haven't written about. Give definitions for the terms.
Figure 1. The Earth's surface is covered by a crust. The crust, together with the rigid upper portion of the mantle that lies just below the crust, makes up the lithosphere. The lithosphere is broken into 15 pieces of varying sizes. These pieces are called plates.
Interaction between plates as they move over the surface of the earth produces Earthquakes. See figure 2. Plate tectonics is the continual slow movement of the tectonic plates, the outermost part of the earth. This motion is what causes earthquakes and volcanoes and has created most of the spectacular scenery around the world.
Figure 2.
An earthquake is caused by a sudden slip on a fault. Stresses in the earth's outer layer push the sides of the fault together. Stress builds up and the rocks slips suddenly, releasing energy in waves that travel through the earth's crust and cause the shaking that we feel during an earthquake.
A fault is a fracture or zone of fractures between two blocks of rock. Faults allow the blocks to move relative to each other. This movement may occur rapidly, in the form of an earthquake - or may occur slowly, in the form of creep. Faults may range in length from a few millimeters to thousands of kilometers. Most faults produce repeated displacements over geologic time. During an earthquake, the rock on one side of the fault suddenly slips with respect to the other. Figure 3.
Strike-slip snap: Snap your fingers. You are only able to snap your fingers when the sheer force directing your fingers to move in opposite directions is greater than the compressional force holding your fingers together. Just as snapping your fingers releases energy, energy is released as rocks move past each other along a strike-slip fault.
Earthquakes occur on faults. When an earthquake occurs on one of these faults, the rock on one side of the fault slips with respect to the other. Plate interaction cause rocks to fail (give way to the stresses on them). This releases energy that causes vibrations to be sent out from the site of the earthquake in the form of waves.
Seismic Waves When an earthquake occurs, it releases energy in the form of waves that radiate from the earthquake source in all directions. The different types of energy waves shake the ground in different ways and also travel through the earth at different velocities. See Figure 4.
The P waves, also called primary or compressional waves are the fastest wave, traveling 5.5 km/second (3.3 miles/second or 12,000 miles/hour). They and are the first to arrive at a given location and can travel through solid and liquid layers of the earth. They alternately compresses and expands material in the same direction it is traveling. They travel similar to the way an earthworm travels in a push-pull linear motion. Because they travel in a linear motion, there is little displacement of Earth's materials. P-waves are the least damaging of all seismic waves.
The S waves, also called secondary or sheer waves is slower than the P wave, maximum speed is 3 km/second. S waves shake the ground up and down and back and forth perpendicular to the direction it is traveling. Because S waves do not travel in a linear motion these are the most destructive. S waves can only pass through solids, and not through the liquid outer core of the Earth's interior. This is why we can't predict an earthquake. Figure 4.
During an earthquake you first will feel a swaying or small jerking motion, then a slight pause, followed by a more intense rolling or jerking motion. The duration of the shaking you feel depends on the earthquake's magnitude, your distance from the epicenter, and the geology of the ground under your feet. Shaking at a site with soft sediments, for example, can last 3 times as long as shaking at a stable bedrock site such as one composed of granite. If the site is in a building, then the height of the building and type of material it is constructed from are also factors.
For minor earthquakes, ground shaking usually lasts only a few seconds. Strong shaking from a major earthquake usually lasts less than one minute. For example, shaking in the 1989 magnitude 7.1 Loma Prieta (San Francisco) earthquake lasted 15 seconds; for the 1906 magnitude 8.3 San Francisco earthquake it lasted about 40 seconds. Shaking for the 1964 magnitude 9.2 Alaska earthquake, however, lasted three minutes.
WHERE WAS IT When an earthquake occurs, one of the first questions is "where was it?" The location may tell us what fault it was on and where damage (if any) most likely occurred. Unfortunately, the earth is not transparent and we can't just see or photograph the earthquake disturbance like meteorologists can photograph clouds. When an earthquake occurs, it generates an expanding wavefront from the earthquake hypocenter at a speed of several kilometers per second. Figure 5.
PICTURES Picture 1.
The information and images in this worksheet came from:
1. CBS News.com photo essays http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/12/29/tech/main590561.shtml
2. Science Kit¨ & Boreal¨ Laboratories
3. USGS Earthquake Hazards Program |
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