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EARTHQUAKES

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What is an earthquake?

Sources/Usage: Public Domain.


A normal (dip-slip) fault is an inclined fracture where the rock mass above an inclined fault
moves down (Public domain.)

An earthquake is what happens when two blocks of the earth suddenly slip past one
another. The surface where they slip is called the fault or fault plane. The location
below the earth’s surface where the earthquake starts is called the hypocenter, and the
location directly above it on the surface of the earth is called the epicenter.

Sometimes an earthquake has foreshocks. These are smaller earthquakes that happen


in the same place as the larger earthquake that follows. Scientists can’t tell that an
earthquake is a foreshock until the larger earthquake happens. The largest, main
earthquake is called the mainshock. Mainshocks always have aftershocks that
follow. These are smaller earthquakes that occur afterwards in the same place as the
mainshock. Depending on the size of the mainshock, aftershocks can continue for
weeks, months, and even years after the mainshock!

What causes earthquakes and where do they


happen?
Sources/Usage: Public Domain.
A simplified cartoon of the crust (brown), mantle (orange), and core (liquid in light gray, solid in
dark gray) of the earth. (Public domain.)

The earth has four major layers: the inner core, outer core,
mantle and crust. The crust and the top of the mantle make up a thin skin on the
surface of our planet.

But this skin is not all in one piece – it is made up of many pieces like a puzzle covering
the surface of the earth. Not only that, but these puzzle pieces keep slowly moving
around, sliding past one another and bumping into each other. We call these puzzle
pieces tectonic plates, and the edges of the plates are called the plate boundaries.
The plate boundaries are made up of many faults, and most of the earthquakes around
the world occur on these faults. Since the edges of the plates are rough, they get stuck
while the rest of the plate keeps moving. Finally, when the plate has moved far enough,
the edges unstick on one of the faults and there is an earthquake.
Sources/Usage: Public Domain.
The tectonic plates divide the Earth's crust into distinct "plates" that are always slowly moving.
Earthquakes are concentrated along these plate boundaries. (Public domain.)

Why does the earth shake when there is an


earthquake?
While the edges of faults are stuck together, and the rest of the block is moving, the
energy that would normally cause the blocks to slide past one another is being stored up.
When the force of the moving blocks finally overcomes the friction of the jagged edges
of the fault and it unsticks, all that stored up energy is released. The energy radiates
outward from the fault in all directions in the form of seismic waves like ripples on a
pond. The seismic waves shake the earth as they move through it, and when the waves
reach the earth’s surface, they shake the ground and anything on it, like our houses and
us!

How are earthquakes recorded?


Sources/Usage: Public Domain.
The cartoon sketch of the seismograph shows how the insrument shakes with the earth below it,
but the recording device remains stationary (instead of the other way around). (Public domain.)

Earthquakes are recorded by instruments called seismographs. The recording they


make is called a seismogram. The seismograph has a base that sets firmly in the
ground, and a heavy weight that hangs free. When an earthquake causes the ground to
shake, the base of the seismograph shakes too, but the hanging weight does not. Instead
the spring or string that it is hanging from absorbs all the movement. The difference in
position between the shaking part of the seismograph and the motionless part is what is
recorded.

How do scientists measure the size of


earthquakes?

Sources/Usage: Public Domain.


An example of a seismic wave with the P wave and S wave labeled. (Public domain.)
The size of an earthquake depends on the size of the fault and the amount of slip on the
fault, but that’s not something scientists can simply measure with a measuring tape
since faults are many kilometers deep beneath the earth’s surface. So how do they
measure an earthquake? They use the seismogram recordings made on
the seismographs at the surface of the earth to determine how large the earthquake
was (figure 5). A short wiggly line that doesn’t wiggle very much means a small
earthquake, and a long wiggly line that wiggles a lot means a large earthquake. The
length of the wiggle depends on the size of the fault, and the size of the wiggle depends
on the amount of slip.

The size of the earthquake is called its magnitude. There is one magnitude for each
earthquake. Scientists also talk about the intensity of shaking from an earthquake, and
this varies depending on where you are during the earthquake.

How can scientists tell where the earthquake


happened?
Seismograms come in handy for locating earthquakes too, and being able to see the P
wave and the S wave is important. You learned how P & S waves each shake the
ground in different ways as they travel through it. P waves are also faster than S waves,
and this fact is what allows us to tell where an earthquake was. To understand how this
works, let’s compare P and S waves to lightning and thunder. Light travels faster than
sound, so during a thunderstorm you will first see the lightning and then you will hear
the thunder. If you are close to the lightning, the thunder will boom right after the
lightning, but if you are far away from the lightning, you can count several seconds
before you hear the thunder. The further you are from the storm, the longer it will take
between the lightning and the thunder.
Sources/Usage: Public Domain.
P Waves alternately compress and stretch the crustal material parallel to the direction they are
propagating. S Waves cause the crustal material to move back and forth perpendicular to the
direction they are travelling. (Public domain.)

P waves are like the lightning, and S waves are like the thunder. The P waves travel
faster and shake the ground where you are first. Then the S waves follow and shake the
ground also. If you are close to the earthquake, the P and S wave will come one right
after the other, but if you are far away, there will be more time between the two.

By looking at the amount of time between the P and S wave on a seismogram recorded
on a seismograph, scientists can tell how far away the earthquake was from that
location. However, they can’t tell in what direction from the seismograph the earthquake
was, only how far away it was. If they draw a circle on a map around the station where
the radius of the circle is the determined distance to the earthquake, they know the
earthquake lies somewhere on the circle. But where?

Scientists then use a method called triangulation to determine exactly where the


earthquake was (see image below). It is called triangulation because a triangle has three
sides, and it takes three seismographs to locate an earthquake. If you draw a circle on a
map around three different seismographs where the radius of each is the distance from
that station to the earthquake, the intersection of those three circles is the epicenter!

Can scientists predict earthquakes?


No, and it is unlikely they will ever be able to predict them. Scientists have tried many
different ways of predicting earthquakes, but none have been successful. On any
particular fault, scientists know there will be another earthquake sometime in the
future, but they have no way of telling when it will happen.

Is there such a thing as earthquake weather? Can


some animals or people tell when an earthquake is
about to hit?
These are two questions that do not yet have definite answers. If weather does affect
earthquake occurrence, or if some animals or people can tell when an earthquake is
coming, we do not yet understand how it works.

Sources/Usage: Public Domain.


Triangulation can be used to locate an earthquake. The seismometers are shown as green dots.
The calculated distance from each seismometer to the earthquake is shown as a circle. The
location where all the circles intersect is the location of the earthquake epicenter. (Public
domain.)

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