Chapter 19
All seimometers include a... that is anchored to the ground and vibrates during an earthquake.
A frame
Richer Scale
A numerical scale used to describe an earthquake.
Focus
An earthquake is the point of failure of rocks at the depth where an earthquake originates.
Epicenter
An earthquake is the point on Earths surface directly above the focus.
Fault Scarps
Area of great vertical offset where the faults intercepts the ground surface.
Stress- strain
Curve usually has two segments: a straight segment and a curve sediment.
San Andrea
Famous California strike-slip fault.
Normal Faults
Fracture caused by horizontal tension.
Strike-slip Faults
Fractures caused by horizontal shear.
Reverse Faults
Fractures that forms as a results pf horizontal compression.
Richter Scale
Ia a numerical scale based on the size of the largest seismic waves generated by a quake that is used to describe its magnitude.
The modified- Metallica scale measure an earthquake.
Intensity Decrease
Tsunami
Is a large ocean wave generated by vertical motions of the seafloor during an earthquake.
Shear
Is stress that caused a materials to twist.
Compression
Is stress that decreased the volume of a materials.
Tension
Is stress that pulls a materials apart.
Strain
Is the deformation of materials on response to stress.
Stress
Is the forces per unit area acting on a material.
Faults
Is the fracture or system along which movement occurs, Along which the movement takes places called the fault plane.
Magnutude
Is the measurement of the amount energy released during an earthquake.
P-S determines
It determines the epicenter distance, or distance to the earthquakes epicenter from the seismic station that recorded the waves.
Primary Waves
P- Waves, squeezes and pull rocks in the same direction along with the waves are traveling.
The majority of the worlds earthquakes occurs in?
Relatively narrow seismic belts that are associated with tectonic plates.
Secondary Waves
S-waves, caused rocks to move at the right angles in relation to the direction of the waves.
Magnitude
The amount if energy released by an earthquake is measured by....
Seismology
The study of earthquakes
Seismogram
Us the record produced by a seismometer.
Ductile Deformation
When stress exceeds a cretin value, a material undergoes ductile deformation, shown by that curve sediment of the graph.
Fractures form
When stress exceeds the strength of the rocks involved.
Modified Mercalli scale
Which measure the amount of damage done to the structure involves, is used to determine the intensity of an earthquake.
Moment magnitude scale
Widely by seismologist to measure earthquakes magnitude, takes into account the size of the fault tuner, the amount of movement along the fault, and the rocks stiffness.
seismic gaps
are section of active faults that have experience significant earthquakes for a long period of time.
Seismometers
are sensitive instruments that detect and record the vibration sent put by earthquakes.
Probability of an earthquake
the history of earthquake in an area. The rate at which strain builds up in the rocks.
Surface waves
travel along the Earth surface, moving in two direction as they pass through rocks.