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Blanka Mitrovic How Earthquakes Occur An earthquake occurs when rocks break and slip along a fault in the earth. Energy is released during an earthquake in several ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Blanka Mitrovic


1
  • Blanka Mitrovic

2
How Earthquakes Occur
  • An earthquake occurs when rocks break and slip
    along a fault in the earth. Energy is released
    during an earthquake in several forms, including
    as movement along the fault, as heat, and as
    seismic waves that radiate out from the "source"
    and causes the ground to shake, sometimes
    hundreds of kilometres away.

3
The Three Main Types of Waves
  • P WAVES cause rock to move
  • back and forth
  • S WAVES shakes the earth up and
    down
  • L WAVES move side to side
  • R WAVES cause surface material to
    move in vertical circles

4
Where They Occur
  • Wherever the tectonic plates that make up the
    Earth's crust subduct, crumple, or grind past
    each other, earthquakes occur. Earthquakes occur
    all over the world however, most occur on active
    faults. 90 of the world's earthquakes occur
    along these plate boundaries. The "Ring of Fire"
    circling the Pacific Ocean, and including
    Canada's west coast, is one of the most active
    areas in the world.
  • Mountains are built by tectonic and volcanic
    activity. Everywhere in the world where these
    activities happen, earthquakes occur with them.
    Besides North America, two large regions in
    particular are at high risk
  • The Pacific Rim
  • The Mediterranean and Middle East regions
  •    Divergent boundaries
  • Along sides of rift valley
  • Indicate horizontal extension
  • Transform boundaries
  • Shallow focus
  • Convergent boundaries
  • Collision boundaries between continents
  • Subduction


5
Earthquake Map
6
Seismographs
  • Seismographs are instruments used to measure
    earthquake waves.
  • A seismogram is the record they produce of the
    arrival times and magnitude of earthquake waves.
  • Modern seismometers amplify the wave motion
    electronically and can detect even very weak or
    very distant signals.
  • Seismographs enable us to measure the size of
    earthquakes and to locate them accurately.

7
The Damage Earthquakes Create
  • Earthquake damage depends on what area is hit. If
    an unpopulated region is struck, there will be
    low loss of life or property. If it hits a large
    city, there may be many injuries and destruction.
    Many of the areas at risk on the Ring of Fire are
    largely populated. Major earthquakes hitting
    those areas today could produce terrible damage.
  • Earthquakes have the power to uproot trees and
    send them crashing into buildings. They can
    trigger landslides and avalanches, and cause
    flooding and tsunamis. Human structures are also
    at risk. Buildings with thick, heavy walls do not
    resist shock waves very well. Violent earthquakes
    often cause structures to collapse, burying
    people underneath. Brick buildings are the most
    vulnerable. Chimneys and heavy roof tiles are
    often shaken off during the tremors, and can
    crash into bystanders or people passing by. The
    shaking of the earth is sometimes not the
    greatest disaster. It is in the ensuing fires and
    floods that often the greatest damage occurs.

8
Preparing For An Earthquake
  • In those parts where strong earthquakes may occur
    people build their houses upon firm ground. Only
    the most elastic materials should be used, like
    wood and reinforced concrete instead of brick or
    stone. They would try to avoid overloading the
    higher parts of the building and do everything
    possible to keep the center of gravity of the
    whole low. Brick chimneys on the rooftops tend to
    fall off at an intensity of VI.
  • People that live in third world countries are
    usually the ones who have the most damage after
    an earthquake, because their houses are not
    strong enough to withstand an earthquake. People
    living in the first world countries are less
    vulnerable to the dangers of an earthquake
    because their houses are better built.

9
Effects of Earthquakes
  • Ground motion
  • Fires
  • Landslides
  • Liquefaction
  • Aftershocks
  • Tsunamis

Fire
Liquefaction
Tsunami
10
The 5 Tips
  • In a case of an earthquake
  • You should get under dining tables or anything
    that can
  • support a lot of weight. Cover your neck and
    face so that
  • its better protected from falling objects and
    broken glass.
  • If possible, face away from any glass. Hold onto
    the table or desk because most likely it will
    move, so be prepared to move with it. Hold that
    position until the shaking stops. If a table or
    desk is not available, you should stand in the
    doorway.
  • Medical aid, water, transportation, electricity,
    and communication may be unavailable or severely
    restricted for several days or weeks after a
    large earthquake. You should be prepared to take
    care of yourself for at least three days.
  • In the case of an earthquake, do not run outside
    or use staircases or elevators.
  • If you are driving during an earthquake, you
    should move to the shoulder. Stay away from
    overpasses, bridges, large buildings, and power
    lines. Stay in your car until the shaking stops.
  • The most important thing of all is to stay
    calm.

11
The Measurement of Earthquakes
  • The Richter Scale
  • M1 to 3 Recorded on local seismographs, but
    generally not felt M3 to 4 Often felt, no
    damage
  • M5 Felt widely, slight damage near epicentre
  • M6 Damage to poorly constructed buildings and
    other structures within 10's km
  • M7 "Major" earthquake, causes serious damage up
    to 100 km (recent Taiwan, Turkey, Kobe, Japan,
    and California earthquakes).
  • M8 "Great" earthquake, great destruction,
    loss of life over several 100 km (1906 San
    Francisco, 1949 Queen Charlotte Islands).
  • M9 Rare great earthquake, major damage over a
    large region over 1000 km (Chile 1960, Alaska
    1964, and west coast of British Columbia.
  • Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale
  • (I) - Not felt except by a very few under
    especially favourable conditions.
  • (II) - Felt only by a few persons at rest,
    especially on upper floors of buildings.
    Delicately suspended objects may swing.
  • (III) - Felt quite noticeably by persons indoors,
    especially on the upper floors of buildings. Many
    do not recognize it as an earthquake. Standing
    motor cars may rock slightly. Vibration similar
    to the passing of a truck. Duration estimated.
  • (IV) - Felt indoors by many, outdoors by few
    during the day. At night, some awakened. Dishes,
    windows, doors disturbed walls make cracking
    sound. Sensation like heavy truck striking
    building. Standing motor cars rocked noticeably.
  • (V) - Felt by nearly everyone many awakened.
    Some dishes and windows broken. Unstable objects
    overturned. Pendulum clocks may stop.
  • (VI) - Felt by all many frightened and run
    outdoors, walk unsteadily. Windows, dishes,
    glassware broken... books off shelves... some
    heavy furniture moved or overturned a few
    instances of fallen plaster. Damage slight.
  • (VII) - Difficult to stand... furniture
    broken..damage negligible in building of good
    design and construction slight to moderate in
    well-built ordinary structures considerable
    damage in poorly built or badly designed
    structures some chimneys broken. Noticed by
    persons driving motor cars.
  • (VIII) - Damage slight in specially designed
    structures considerable in ordinary substantial
    buildings with partial collapse. Damage great in
    poorly built structures. Fall of chimneys,
    factory stacks, columns, monuments, walls. Heavy
    furniture moved.
  • (IX) - General panic... damage considerable in
    specially designed structures, well designed
    frame structures thrown out of plumb. Damage
    great in substantial buildings, with partial
    collapse. Buildings shifted off foundations.
  • (X) - Some well built wooden structures
    destroyed most masonry and frame structures
    destroyed with foundations. Rails bent."
  • (XI) - Few, if any (masonry) structures remain
    standing. Bridges destroyed. Rails bent greatly.
  • (XII) - Damage total. Lines of sight and level
    distorted. Objects thrown into the air.

12
The Mexico Earthquake Article
  • Natural Hazards Slides Vol. 2 - Earthquake
    Events Earthquake of 9/19/1985, Mexico City
  • EARTHQUAKE OF SEPTEMBER 19, 1985 MEXICO CITY,
    MEXICO
  • On September 19, 1985, at 717 A.M., a Richter
    magnitude 8.1 earthquake occurred on the Pacific
    coast of Mexico. The damage was concentrated in a
    25 km2 area of Mexico City, 350 km from the
    epicenter. Of a population of 18 million, an
    estimated 10,000 people were killed, and 50,000
    were injured. In addition, 250,000 people lost
    their homes, and property damage amounted to 5
    billion. Over 800 buildings crumbled, including
    hotels, hospitals, schools, and businesses.
    Communications between the Mexican capitol and
    the outside world were interrupted for many days.
  • Surrounding areas affected by the earthquake
    included the Mexican States of Jalisco, Guerrero,
    and Michoacan. Damage in the epicentral area was
    restricted to a few tourist resorts and
    industrial estates along the Mexico Pacific
    coast. A two-meter tsunami also caused some
    damage in this area.
  • There are geologic reasons why Mexico and
    especially Mexico City are vulnerable to
    earthquake damage. Along the west coast of
    southern Mexico and Central America the Cocos
    Plate dips beneath the North American Plate
    producing a very active seismic zone. Since the
    beginning of the twentieth century 35 earthquakes
    of magnitude greater than 7.0 have occurred in
    this zone. The location of the 1985 earthquake's
    epicenter near the coast at the border between
    the states of Michoacan and Guerrero was not a
    surprise. Prior to the 1985 earthquake this area,
    located between two areas that had experienced
    recent earthquakes, was known as the "Michoacan
    Gap." The "gap" was filled in 1985 by the main
    shock and a severe aftershock (magnitude 7.5)
    that occurred the next day.
  • Mexico City itself lies in a broad basin formed
    approximately 30 million years ago by faulting of
    an uplifted plateau. Volcanic activity closed the
    basin and resulted in the formation of Lake
    Texcoco. The Aztecs chose an island in this lake
    as an easily defended location for their capitol.
    The expansion of the capitol (Mexico City) and
    the gradual draining of the lake left the world's
    largest population center located largely on
    unconsolidated lake-bed sediments. These soft
    sedimentary clay deposits amplified the seismic
    waves, or they subsided carrying buildings down
    with them. Double resonance coupling between the
    earthquake waves, the subsoils, and the buildings
    caused intensity IX shaking in some areas,
    lasting up to three minutes. Earthquakes in 1957
    and in 1979 also damaged Mexico City. However,
    neither of these earthquakes was quite as
    devastating as the 1985 earthquake.
  • In the area of greatest damage in downtown
    Mexico City, some types of structures failed more
    frequently than others. In the highest damage
    category were buildings with six or more floors.
    Resonance frequencies of these buildings were
    similar to the resonance frequencies of the
    subsoil. Because of the "inverted pendulum
    effect" and unusual flexibility of Mexico City
    structures, upper floors swayed as much as one
    meter and frequently collapsed. Differential
    movements of adjacent buildings also resulted in
    damage. A flexible building often failed if it
    was held by adjacent, more rigid lower buildings.
    Damage or failure often occurred where two
    swaying buildings came in contact. Corner
    buildings were also vulnerable to damage. Lessons
    learned from the patterns of earthquake damage
    need to be quickly applied to prevent another
    disaster when an earthquake releases stress that
    is building in another area--along the Mexican
    coast between Acapulco and Zihuatanejo.

13
The Kobe Earthquake Article
  • Natural Hazards Slides Vol. 2 - Earthquake
    Events Kobe Earthquake
  • KOBE
  • The Earthquake
  • At 546 A.M. local time on January 17, 1995, a
    major earthquake occurred near the City of Kobe,
    Japan. The 6.9 magnitude earthquake had 40 km of
    bilateral rupture from a hypocenter 10 km under
    the northern tip of the island of Awaji in the
    Sea of Japan. The greatest intensity of shaking
    was in a narrow corridor of two to four
    kilometers stretching 40 km along the coast of
    Osaka Bay. The ground moved as much as five
    meters in some places. The worst destruction ran
    along the previously undetected fault on the
    coast, east of Kobe. Kobe's major business,
    industrial and port facilities, and residences
    are located in this strip.
  • Note This earthquake is also called the
    Hyogo-Ken Nambu, Japan, Earthquake and Southern
    Hyogo Prefecture Earthquake.
  • The DamageThe earthquake caused extensive
    damage to the coastal cities that border Osaka
    Bay and to the northern portion of Awaji Island.
    Inland cities located near the northern end of
    the fault rupture sustained significant damage.
    Osaka (Japan's second largest city), Kyoto, and
    Shiga, farther to the northeast, reported
    extensive damage from the quake. The earthquake
    caused 5,480 deathsthe highest death toll in
    Japan since the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923
    (142,000 deaths). About 94,900 people were
    injured nearly 317,000 people moved to
    evacuation centers.
  • BuildingsMore than 192,700 houses and
    buildings were totally destroyed by the
    earthquake. Most of the damaged buildings were
    unsafe to occupy and had to be torn down later.
    The repair costs to buildings were estimated at
    more than 100 billion (U.S. Dollars). The design
    code in effect at the time of the construction
    was a major factor in determining the extent of
    damage to the commercial and residential
    buildings. Modern high-rise buildings typically
    fared better than older residential construction.
  • TransportationKobe is located within the main
    transportation corridor between central and
    southern Honshu. The Hanshin Expressway,
    supported by large hammerhead reinforced concrete
    piers, failed over a twenty kilometer length. The
    supporting steel girders of the Wangan Expressway
    (along the harbor shore) were dislodged from
    their seats, although few collapsed.
  • Rail facilities were particularly hard hit. All
    three main lines through the corridor sustained
    embankment failures, overpass collapses,
    distorted rails, and other severe damage. The
    elevated viaduct that carries the Bullet Train
    was severely damaged when supporting columns
    underwent shear failure. There was damage to the
    subway systems, including a rare instance of
    severe earthquake damage to a modern tunnel for
    reasons other than fault displacement near the
    portal. Rail and road transportation disruption
    affected a number of companies relying on rapid
    production systems. Due to effects on
    transportation, automobile and motorcycle
    manufacturers temporarily shut down factories
    located far from the earthquake site.
  • Port DamageThe port of Kobe, one of the
    largest container facilities in the world,
    sustained major damage. Shipping had to be
    diverted to other ports. Cessation of port
    functions impeded the shipment of raw materials
    and parts between businesses in Japan and their
    subsidiaries or partners overseas. This impacted
    the electronics, apparel, and auto manufacturing
    industries. There was severe and widespread
    liquefaction as a result of the earthquake.
    Lateral ground deformation caused the piers of
    the highway bridge and electric rail bridge
    between Port Island and Kobe to lean between two
    and three degrees toward the waterfront. Of 186
    heavy shipping berths, 179 were inoperable after
    the earthquake.
  • UtilitiesElectric power and telecommunications
    services were not disrupted, but most of Kobe
    lost essential services such as water, water
    treatment, and gas utilities. Electrical power
    performed well with very little reduction in
    service during the earthquake, and was completely
    restored within one week. Underground water
    pipelines sustained severe damage in the
    earthquake. Numerous breaks resulted in a general
    lack of service in Kobe, Ashiya, and Nishinomiya.
    Water was restored within two weeks and gas was
    restored within a month.
  • FiresAlmost 150 fires started, most within
    minutes of the earthquake, and primarily in
    densely built-up low rise areas of the city. The
    fires destroyed one million square meters of
    residential area in Kobe.

14
Kobe and Mexico City Earthquakes
  • The Kobe earthquake of magnitude 7.2 struck the
    region of Kobe and Osaka in south-central Japan.
    This region is Japans second-most populated and
    industrialized area, after Tokyo. The shock
    occurred at a shallow depth on a fault running
    from Awaji Island through the city of Kobe, which
    in itself has a population of about 1.5 million.
  • A powerful Mexico City earthquake registering
    magnitude of 8.1 rocked central Mexico. The quake
    was centered in the coastal mountains of the
    Michoacan Province and caused substantial damage
    throughout central Mexico, including in Mexico
    City - some 240 miles east of the epicentre.
  • The Kobe earthquake struck on Tuesday, January
    17th 1995, at 546 a.m. local time.
  • The Mexico City earthquake struck at 717 a.m.
    September 19th, 1985.
  • Damage was recorded over a 100-kilometer radius
    from the epicentre, including the cities of Kobe,
    Osaka, and Kyoto, but Kobe and its immediate
    region were the areas most severely affected.
    Damage was particularly severe in central Kobe,
    in an area roughly 5 kilometres by 20 kilometres
    parallel to the Port of Kobe. This coastal area
    is composed primarily of soft alluvial soils and
    artificial fills. Severe damage extended well
    northeast and east of Kobe into the outskirts of
    Osaka and its port.
  • Severe damage occurred to about 500 buildings in
    Mexico City with widespread light to moderate
    damage in other parts of the country. Although
    quake killed over 8,000 people, causalities would
    nave been much higher if the quake had occurred
    just a couple hours later when the schools and
    office buildings would have been full with
    people.

15
  • Japan is known to have a lot of minor and a few
    major earthquakes.
  • Mexico City has been rocked several times in the
    past. It is largely built upon soft, poorly
    consolidated lake sediments from the former Lake
    Texcoco, which was drained by the Spanish
    following their occupation of the region. Thick
    sequences of soft sediments like these tend to
    amplify seismic waves and cause the ground to
    shake much more vigorously than the surrounding
    bedrock.
  • The Kobe earthquake lasted about twenty seconds.
  • The Mexico City earthquake was about three
    minutes long, but to a lot of people it seemed
    like an eternity.
  • People did not have any warning for either of the
    two earthquakes.
  • Nearly 5,500 deaths have been confirmed, with the
    number of injured people reaching about 35,000.
    Nearly 180,000 buildings were badly damaged or
    destroyed, and officials estimate that more than
    300,000 people were homeless on the night of the
    earthquake.
  • In the Mexico City quake, at least 9,500 people
    were killed, about 30,000 were injured, more than
    100,000 people were left homeless, and severe
    damage was caused in parts of Mexico City and in
    several states of central Mexico. The death toll
    from this earthquake may be as high as 35,000. It
    is estimated that the quake seriously affected an
    area of approximately 825,000 square kilometres,
    caused between 3 and 4 billion U.S. dollars of
    damage, and was felt by almost 20 million people.

16
  • Kobes current estimates of the repair costs in
    the earthquake have been reported in the range of
    95 billion to U.S.147 billion, many times the
    damage inflicted by the 1994 Northridge
    Earthquake. These figures do not include the loss
    to building contents such as equipment and
    inventory, which will also be substantial.
  • Mexico City got help from the states of the
    (Mexican) Republic and from people and institutes
    from abroad did not have to be waited for. The
    assistance was immediate. Aid and relief brigades
    came from Germany, Belgium, Algeria, Brazil,
    Canada, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Spain, the
    United States, France, Great Britain, the
    Netherlands, Israel, Panama, Switzerland,
    Venezuela, etc. Between September 19, 1985 and
    January 5, 1986, assistance reached the country,
    with 296 flights originating from 45 different
    countries. A figure that does not include the
    countries that made donations exclusively in
    cash. Aid by land came from 6 countries.

17
The Kobe Earthquake
18
The Mexico City Earthquake
19
Bibliography
  • Encyclopedia of Earthquakes and Volcanoes, 2001.
    New Edition.
  • http//earthquake.usgs.gov/recenteqsww/world_merc.
    html\
  • http//pubs.usgs.gov/gip/earthq1/
  • http//www.crustal.ucsb.edu/ics/understanding/
  • http//www.pgc.nrcan.gc.ca/seismo/eqinfo/q-a.htm
  • http//www.seismo.unr.edu/ftp/pub/louie/class/100/
    plate-tectonics.html

20
  • National Geographic. Volume 169, No.5, (May
    1986) pg. 654
  • National Geographic. Volume 188, No. , (July
    1995) pg. 112.
  • Tazieff, Haroun. When The Earth Trembles. New
    York Harcourt, Brace World, Inc, 1964.
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