Chapter 19 Earth Science
Fluid
"As a solid"
Tsunami
A large ocean wave generated by vertical motions of the seafloor during an earthquake
Richter Scale
A numerical rating system that measures the energy of the largest seismic waves
Moment Magnitude Scale
A rating scale that measures the energy released by an earthquake, taking into account the seize of the fault rupture, the amount of movement along the fault, and the rocks' stiffness
P-waves
Also known as Body Waves Only travel through the interior of earth (solids & fluids)
S-waves
Also known as Body Waves Only travel through the interior of earth (solids)
Surface Waves
Also known as Long Waves Can only travel along the surface of earth They do not penetrate into earth
Magnitude
An estimation of energy released (intensity) during an earthquake and can be measured on the Richter scale
Intensity
An estimation of the damage caused by an earthquake and is measured with the modified Mercalli scale
Fault
Any fracture or system of fractures along which Earth moves
Secondary Waves
Are named with respect to their arrival time. Also called S-waves
Seismometer
Can record the vibrations caused by seismic waves at great distances from an earth's epicenter
Elastic Deformation
Caused when a material is compressed, bent, or stretched
Horizontal Tension
Horizontal extension of crust
Horizontal Compression
Horizontal shortening of crust
Soil Liquification
In areas with sand that is nearly saturated with water, seismic vibrations can cause the ground to behave like a liquid
Outer Core
Liquid
Horizontal Shear
Movement is almost completely horizontal
Seismic Gap
Sections located along faults that are known to be active, but which have not experienced significant earthquakes for a long period of time
Crust/Lithosphere
Solid
Inner Core
Solid
Primary Waves
Squeeze and push rocks in the direction along which the waves are traveling. Also referred to as P-waves
Strain
The deformation of materials in response to stress
Stress
The deformation that causes a material to bend and stretch
Amplitude
The largest seismic wave on a seismogram
Frequency
The number of wave crests passing a given point at a given time
Epicenter
The point on Earth's surface directly above the focus.
Focus
The point where the waves originate
Seismogram
The record produced by a seismometer
Surface Waves
The third and slowest type of waves that are the most destructive. They cause the most movement of the ground, and take the longest time to pass
Wave Period
The time interval between the passage of adjacent crests
Seismic Waves
The vibrations of the ground produced during an earthquake
Modified Mercalli Scale
This measure, called the intensity of an earthquake, rates the type of damage and other effects of an earthquake
Plastic Deformation
When stress builds up past a certain point, passed the elastic limit, rocks undergo this process