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6GEO4 Unit 4 Tectonic Activity and Hazards

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Title: 6GEO4 Unit 4 Tectonic Activity and Hazards


1
6GEO4 Unit 4 Tectonic Activity and Hazards
2
What is this option about?
  • The Tectonic Activity and Hazards option focuses
    on the range of natural hazards generated by
    plate tectonics
  • In addition to understanding why these hazards
    happen, you will need to understand
  • The impact of tectonic processes on the landscape
  • The impact of tectonic hazards on people
  • The ways in which people respond to, and try to
    manage, natural hazards.

3
CONTENTS
  • Tectonic activity and causes
  • Tectonic hazards physical impacts
  • Tectonic hazards human impacts
  • Response to tectonic hazards

Click on the information icon to jump
to that section. Click on the home button
to return to this contents page
4
1. Tectonic activity and causes
  • Tectonic activity can produce a very large range
    of hazard events
  • Not all of these events are disasters
  • A natural hazard event becomes a disaster when
    the event causes a significant impact on a
    vulnerable population.
  • These impacts could be human (death, injury) and
    / or economic (property losses, loss of income).
  • Definitions vary, but significant losses
    usually means 10 deaths / 100 affected / 1
    million losses.

The Dregg disaster model
5
Event profiles
  • Not all tectonic hazards are the same
  • Event profiles are a common way of comparing
    different hazards
  • In this example the 2004 Asian Tsunami and
    ongoing eruption of Kilauea on Hawaii are
    compared
  • Hazard profiles can be drawn for any event.

6
Earths heat engine
  • Tectonic processes are driven by radioactive
    decay in the core
  • This decay generates heat inside the earth, which
    drives vast convection currents
  • This convection is largely responsible for plate
    movement

7
Tectonic settings and plates
  • Most tectonic hazards are concentrated at plate
    margins (boundaries), although hotspots are a
    notable exception.
  • Different types of boundary generate very
    different tectonic hazards.

8
The range of volcanic hazards
  • Dangerous volcanic hazards are found along
    subduction zones at destructive plate margins
  • The most dangerous volcanoes are themselves
    multiple hazard areas.
  • Volcanoes at constructive plate margins (Iceland)
    and oceanic hotspots(Hawaii) are much less
    hazardous and destructive.

9
Magma generation
  • Magma, molten rock in the earths crust, has an
    important relationship with volcanic explosivity
    and hazard level
  • Andesitic magmas, formed by wet partial melting
    at subduction zones produce highly explosive and
    destructive composite volcanoes

10
Measuring volcanic explosivity
  • The Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) is used to
    measure volcanic power.
  • VEI measures Volume of ejecta Height of the
    eruption column Duration of the eruption.
  • Modern humans have never experienced a VEI 7 or 8

11
Earthquakes
  • Earthquakes are a very common, sudden release of
    energy that generate seismic waves
  • Most occur along faults (cracks in the earths
    crust) which become locked
  • Opposing tectonic forces push against the locked
    fault, building up strain, which eventually gives
    way releasing stored energy
  • This energy spreads out rapidly from the
    earthquake origin (the focus) reaching the
    surface at the epicentre, and then spreading
    horizontally.

12
Tsunami
  • Tsunami are relatively rare events.
  • They are generated by submarine earthquakes,
    volcanic collapse, and coastal landslides, which
    suddenly displace huge volumes of water
  • The 1993 Okushiri tsunami (Japan), 2004 Asian
    Tsunami and 2009 Samoa events are all useful as
    case studies.
  • Tsunami waves are radically different from normal
    wind generated ocean waves.
  • When a tsunami hits a coastline, the effect is
    more like a devastating coastal flood than a
    single breaking waves

13
2. Tectonic hazards physical impacts
  • Tectonic processes play a key role in forming the
    landscape around us
  • Volcanic activity and the movement of tectonic
    plates create mountains, plateaux and other
    landscape features
  • These landscapes are then modified by
    geomorphological processes (weathering, rivers,
    ice, wind and slope processes)

14
Magma type and volcano morphology
  • Volcanoes are extrusive igneous landforms. The
    form of volcanoes is related to magma types, and
    therefore to different tectonic settings
  • Basaltic huge, low relief shield volcanoes plus
    small scoria cones and fissure vents.
  • Andesitic steep sided strato-volcanoes layers
    of lava, ash and tephra.
  • Rhyolitic central craters with lava plugs /
    domes, due to high viscosity of the lava.
    Calderas and collapse calderas.

15
Extrusive igneous activity
  • Large scale outpourings of basaltic magma, called
    flood basalts, have occurred at various times in
    the past.
  • These produce distinctive lava plateaux and
    stepped or trap topography

16
Intrusive igneous activity
  • The injection (intrusion) of magma below the
    surface can produce characteristic landforms
  • Igneous rock normally resists weathering and
    erosion in comparison to surrounding rocks, which
    produces positive relief features.
  • Large intrusions such as batholiths produce
    upland areas, whereas minor intrusions produce
    smaller landscape features

17
Earthquakes and faults
  • Tectonic movements and movements along faults
    (which generate earthquakes) also produce
    distinctive landforms and relief

Note diagram not to scale
18
3. Tectonic hazards human impacts
  • A surprising number of people live in areas of
    active tectonic processes
  • Major tectonic hazards can strike with
    devastating force
  • The 2005 Kashmir Earthquakes killed around 85000,
    the 2008 Sichuan quake over 65,000 and 200,000
    died in the 2004 Asian Tsunami
  • It is important to consider why people live, in
    such large numbers, in areas of great risk

19
Impacts
  • Every hazard event is different, and therefore
    the specific impacts of disaster vary
  • When researching case studies, it is important to
    be able to identify specific impacts and be able
    to explain these
  • Some impacts are tangible and can be given a
    financial value. Others are intangible, such as
    the destruction of a temple or artwork.
  • Many losses are direct and immediate such as
    property damage, but others are indirect these
    come later and are harder to quantify, such as
    stress and psychological damage.
  • Impacts are often considered as human (death,
    injury, illness), economic (property loss, loss
    of income, cost of relief effort) and physical
    (changes to landscape and topography).

20
  • Examine the two earthquakes below and consider
    how factors such as economic development,
    building types, the geography of the area
    affected and the relief effort may have affected
    the impacts

21
Developed versus developing world
  • It is often said that disaster impacts in the
    developed world are largely economic, whereas in
    the developing world they are human (death).
  • You should carefully consider if this
    generalisation is true. (see the table, right)
  • The 1995 Kobe earthquake in Japan and 1991
    eruption of Mt Pinatubo in the Philippines are
    useful examples to consider

22
Impacts over time
  • A simplified version of Parks hazard response
    model is shown below
  • Different hazard events have different impacts,
    shown by the speed of the drop in quality of
    life, the duration of the decline, and the speed
    and nature of recovery.
  • The differences in the 3 lines might be related
    to type of hazard, degree of preparedness, speed
    of the relief effort and the nature of recovery
    and rebuilding.

23
4. Response to tectonic hazards
  • People cope with natural hazards in very
    different ways
  • The chosen ways are often related to wealth and
    access to technology
  • Humans do have a capacity to ignore or seriously
    underestimate risk, even when it seems obvious to
    others
  • Often it may seem obvious that people should move
    out of harms way, but in reality this may be
    impossible.

24
Hazard modification
  • Several different approaches can be taken to
    reduce the impacts of tectonic hazards

25
The hazard management cycle
  • Successful hazard management involves a cycle
    (see diagram) which focuses on the 3 types of
    modification from the previous slide.
  • A focus on modifying loss only, will not improve
    survival chances when the next hazard strikes
  • Long before a natural hazard event, there needs
    to be a focus on mitigation and prevention (if
    possible) as well as human preparedness.
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