geology 100 exam # 3 study guide
Nuee Ardentes or Pyroclastic flow
("fire cloud") the hot gases roar down the mountain slope instead of up into the atmosphere
Vent
(Central Vent) mail opening at the top of the volcano. -some have secondary vents in & around
Describe how a seismologists determines the location of the epicenter of an earthquake
-Triangulation -D= S x T (distance = speed of wave x time it travels) -3 station reports are needed to locate but only 1 report is needed to determine distance to epicenter
San Andreas Fault
-the boundary between the North American and Pacific plates -Horizontal movement (transform fault) -10% of US population lives near it -"great quake" is produced an average of once every 160 yrs
Name 3 basic seismic waves & 2 facts ab each
1. Primary or P-waves- 1st to reach an area; fastest (6 km/sec); compression pattern in a straight line 2. Secondary or S-waves- move ab 3 km/sec; wavy, side-to-side pattern 3. Surface or L-waves - begin at the epicenter & can only travel on the surface; speed ab 2 km/sec; ocean like wave pattern- most destructive wave
Name & Define 3 earthquake scales
1. Richter Scale- based on the amplitude of largest seismic wave recorded 2. Modified Mercalli Scale- measure the intensity of the earthquake which directly effects humans & surface structures 3. Moment Magnitude Scale (MMS)- most commonly used, estimates/measures the energy released by the quake
List 4 basic types of mountains- type, how it changes, example
1. Volcanic - lava builds up on the land/sea floor creating mnts. examples: cascades, hawaiian isalands, surtsey 2. Dome- magma intrusions invade above rock layers & push up to form dome-shaped mnts called lacccoliths. examples: Ozark Mt. & Stone Mt. 3. Folded-- sediments build up on the ocean floor from the land forming a geosyncline- the pressure from sides raises & folds the rock layers. examples: The Appalachian Mountains & Himalayan Mts. 4. Fault/Block Mts.- land masses shift upward along a fault zone during earthquakes creating steep, jagged mountains. examples: rocky mts & the andes mts.
Name & Define the 3 types of plate boundaries
1. divergent- move away from each other 2. convergent- move against each other 3. transform- 2 plates slip past each other laterally
List 6 major hazards of earthquakes
1. ground shaking & foundation failure 2. fire 3. falling objects 4. liquefaction 5. landslides 6. aftershocks
List 4 major hazards of volcanic eruptions
1. lava 2. Pyroclastic Flow 3. floods, forest fires, & lahars (hot mudflows) 4. volcanic gases & dust, ashes, & cinders
List 6 major types of evidence which Wegener used to support his Theory of Continental Drift *****
1. map fit 2. matching mountain belts 3. paleontology---Mesosaurus 4. glaciation patterns 5. location of climate zones 6. creation of "new mountains"
List 5 methods which are used to forecast volcanic eruptions
1. past eruption patterns 2. earthquake activity 3. temperature changes in rock/water 4. bulging of land at surface (tiltmeters) 5. analysis of radon gas emissions
List 4 important economic benefits of volcanic activity
1. recreation/tourism 2. fertile soils 3. geothermal energy 4. source of valuable minerals
List 5 methods which are used to forecast earthquakes
1. tilting or bulging of surface 2. changes in radon gas emissions 3. changes in groundwater levels 4. unusual animal behavior (china) 5. past earthquake patterns & monitoring fault zones
Geosyncline
A major downwarp in the Earth's crust in which sediments accumulate.
Mount St. Helens
A mountain within the Cascade Mountain Range that runs through the state of Washington. erupted May 18, 1980 and resulted in deaths
Continental Drift
Earth's continents are not fixed in place but move slowly over geologic time due to geological factors like tectonic plates
Lithosphere
Earth's outer layer that varies in both thickness & density depending on if it is oceanic or continental
What is the difference between a Hanging Wall & a Footwall?
Faulting terms --if the miner is divided by the fault plane, he attaches his lantern on the hanging wall (move down relative to the footwall) and his feet are on the footwall
What is the difference between Focus and Epicenter?
Focus - point underground where the earthquake originates. Epicenter- point of the surface directly above the focus (usually the strongest shocks)
Alfred Wegener
German meteoroloigst who formulated the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1912
New Madrid, MO.
Great EQ felt as far as Boston occurred here 3-4 M7 at this area in a two year window
Isostasy
The balancing of the downward force of the crust and the upward force of the mantle.
Subduction
The process by which oceanic crust sinks beneath a deep-ocean trench and back into the mantle at a convergent plate boundary.
Kilauea Volcano
This Hawaiian shield volcano has been erupting continuously since 1983, most active volcano in the world
Mount Vesuvius
Volcano that erupted in 79 AD that killed many people and buried the city of Pompeii; nuee ardente gases gottem
Fault
a crack in the earth's crust
Rift Valley
a deep canyon-like structure along the crest of some ridge segments; evidence that tensional forces are actively pulling the oceanic crust apart at the ridge crest
Asthenosphere
a hotter & weaker region in the mantle that lies below the lithosphere
Basin
a natural depression in the surface of the land often with a lake at the bottom of it
Monocline
a one sided fold -type of complex fold
Convection Cells
a pattern of convection- upward movement of less dense material & downward movement of more dense material that appears to drive the motion of plates
Mesisaurus
a small aquatic freshwater reptile whose fossil remains are limited to rocks of permain age in South America & Southwestern Africa. an example to back Wegener's argument
Pangaea
a supercontinent that existed about 200 million years ago, during the later paleozoic & early mesozoic eras.
Caldera
an extremely large crater of a volcano -example: Crater Lake National Park in Oregon (Mount Mazama)
Subduction Zone
another name for convergent boundaries, they are sites where lithosphere is descending onto the mantle. It occurs bc the density of the descending lithosphere plate is greater than the density of the underlying asthenosphere
Earthquake
any shaking or trembling in the crust of the earth caused by sudden movement along a fault zone
Submarine Volcanoes
begin as lava eruptions on the ocean floor & form island volcanoes; can develop over a hot spot or on a plate boundary -example: Surtsey off the coast of Iceland (on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge) -special type of volcano
Cindercone
composed of mainly ashes & cinders; usually no lava flows; has a cone shaped mountain w/ steep sides; very explosive eruptions -examples: Sunset Crater near Flagstaff, Arizona & Paricutin, Mexico -1 of 3 types of volcanic peaks
Shield
composed of mainly fluid-like lava; largest in overall size; dome-shaped w/ gentle slope (5-10 degrees); the least explosive -examples: Moana Loa on Hawaii- world's largest & Kilauea on Hawaii (currently active) -1 of 3 types of volcanic peaks
Plate Boundaries
deep faults or cracks in the Earth's crust like the Pacific "Ring of Fire"
Syncline
downward fold of the rock layers -type of fold
Mid-Ocean Ridge
fracture zone between segments of the ridge are transform faults in oceanic crust
Tsunami
giant seismic sea waves created on the ocean floor faults -hazard of earthquake
Krakatau
island volcano in the east indies which self-destructed in 1883; caused the "year without summer" in the U.S.
Fault- Block Mountains
land masses shift upward along a fault zone during earthquakes creating steep, jagged mountains; examples: rocky mts & andes mts
Hot Spots
localized hot areas not associated w/ plate boundaries. Move w/ the plate, so eventually become inactive example: Hawaiian Islands w/ hot spot in the middle of the Pacific Plate
Deep-Ocean Trench
long linear depressions in the seafloor that are generally located a few hundred kilometers offshore of either a continent or a chain of volcanic islands.
Describe 3 major differences between Magma & Lava
magma- 1. deep inside earth 2. formed from high silica minerals (felsic) 3.has great viscosity or thickness (the thicker the more explosive) lava- 1. on or near the surface 2. formed from low silica minerals (mafic) 3. low viscosity or fluid-like (non-explosive)
Composite (Stratovolcano)
most common type; alternates between lava eruptions & ash/cinder eruptions; can be explosive sometimes; the tallest volcanic mountains in height -examples: Mt. Rainer near Seattle, WA, Mount St. Helens, Mt. Vesuvius & Mt. Etna -1 of 3 types of volcanic peaks
Island Arc
new formed land, consisting of an arc-shaped chain of volcanic islands, develops on the overriding plate
Appalachians
on the eastern US; composed of parallel ridges & valleys; it is an example of folded mountains; they are older than the coast
Ring of Fire
plate boundaries exist all around the Pacific Ocean rim; most are subduction zones w/ deep trenches; 75% of all volcanoes lie in the '"Ring of Fire"
Paleomagnetism
rocks that formed thousands or millions of years ago and contain a "record" of the direction of the magnetic poles at the time of their formation
aa Lava
rough, jagged pieces or blocks from slow moving lava
Crater
round, bowl-shaped depression at the top of the volcano
pillow lava
rounded form of lava usually from flows in the ocean
Seismograph
sensitive instruments used to monitor & record earthquake waves.
What does a Seismic Wave Time-Travel Graph show?
shows the time and distance that the P- wave and S-wave are traveling at
pahoehoe
smooth, twisted ropes from fast moving lava
Fault Scarp
steep cliffs at the edge of the vertically displaced block
Liquefaction
subsidence caused by shaken water-saturated ground. -hazard of earthquake
Elastic Rebound Theory
the "physics behind earthquakes" build-up and release of rock stress in the form of waves
Mount Pelee
the 1902 eruption of Mouth Pelee on the island of Martinique in the Caribbean destroyed the city of St. Pierre; The Nuee ardente vaporized 28,000 ppl, only 1 survivor- a criminal
Fold
the bend in layers of rock folding- the bending of crustal rocks due to stress such as lateral compression
Graben
the block drops down between 2 parallel faults. example: death valley
Crustal Deformation
the deformation of the earth's crust; the deformed rocks are solid not molten & are particularly obvious in sedimentary rocks since they originally were deposited horizontal - two primary types of deformation: folding & faulting
Theory of Plate Tectonics
the lithosphere consist of segments & plates, the plates meet along boundaries tht may be 1. divergent (move apart from each other), 2. convergent (move towards each other), or 3. transform (move laterally past each other).
Magnetic Polar Reversals
the magnetic North pole becomes the magnetic South pole and vice versa.
Volcanic Neck
the pipe or "throat" of an old volcano that filled w/ solidified lava after its final eruption. -examples: Shiprock in New Mexico & Devils Tower in Wyoming
Sea Floor Spreading
the process by which new oceanic lithosphere forms as magma rises toward the surface and solidifies creating new seafloor. -the term for the mechanism that operates along the oceanic ridge to create new seafloor
Orogenesis
the process which form mountains on the earth -there are 4 basic types
Seismology
the study of earthquakes and their effects
Horst
uplifted block between 2 parallel normal faults
Anticline
upward fold of the rock layers -type of fold -can develop into traps underground for oil & natural gas deposits- holds economic value- in gulf of mexico
Volcano
usually a mountain landform around an opening (vent) in the Earth's crust where magma reaches the surface as lava.
Flood Basalt
vast accumulations of lava that build up, layer upon layer, on the surface. (also called lava plateaus); possible cause of mass extinctions in the past. -example: Columbia River Plateau on the Pacific Northwest & Yellowstone (closest one to us)
Magnetometer
very sensitive instrument towed by Oceanographers to survey the ocean floor. They reveal signature of seafloor spreading as a symmetrical pattern of magnetic stripes parallel to the axis of the mid-ocean ridge
Fault Zone
weak cracks in the rock layers
Convergent Plate Boundary
when two plates move towards one-another, resulting in either oceanic lithosphere going beneath an overriding plate-eventually to be reabsorbed into the mantle, or possibly in the collision of two continental blocks to create a mountain belt. examples: Andes, Cascades
Transform Plate Boundary
where two plates grind past each other without the production or destruction of lithosphere example:San Andreas Fault
Divergent Plate Boundary
where two plates move apart, resulting in upwelling & partial melting of hot material from the mantle to create new seafloor. example: The Mid-Atlantic Ridge