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objective: 3240-0501 The solid crust that we stand on seems very strong and stable. The plates we live on are constantly in motion. Normally we don't feel this motion, but every once in a while the earth reminds us how dynamic it actually is. An earthquake is the vibrations we feel when the earth's crust suddenly moves. What causes these sudden, larger movements of the crust? You have probably played with a rubber band, even shooting it at your brother or sister. When you stretch the rubber band, you know that it will normally snap back. If you pull it too far, it will break. The earth's crust act much in the same way. The plates can stretch so far, but if they stretch farther than their elastic limit, they will break and release huge vibrations that can be felt large distances away. The crust moves along cracks called faults. A fault is a break in the earth's crust. The earth can move in different directions depending on the type of fault. TYPES OF FAULTS When the earth's plates come together, they produce compression fores that push on rocks from either side. Sometimes the rocks bend. Other times they break and one rock slides up over the other. In a reverse fault the rock above the fault slides up and over the rock below the fault. Tension, a pulling force that causes the plates to move apart, can create a normal fault. The rocks above a normal fault move downward as the plates below the fault move upward. The Three Types Of Stresses On The Earth's Crust
Associated formations: Compression: anticline, sincline, reverse fault, thrust fault, folded mountains, volcanos, Island arc, trenches. Tension: normal faults, fault block mountains, rift valley, midocean ridge, volcanos. Shearing: lateral faults The activity Candy Quakes is a fun method to illustrate the above types of stresses. MEASURING AN EARTHQUAKE
A seismograph is an instrument that detects primary, secondary and surface waves. A seismologist is a scientist who studies seismic waves and earthquakes. A seismograph consists of a weight attached to a wire or a spring like a pendulum. The weight is stationary because it isn't connected directly to the earth. A marking instrument is attached to the weight and records on a sheet of paper when the earth moves. What do you think the line looks like when the earth is still? When it is moving? Seismologist use a scale created by Charles Richter and Beno Guttenberg in 1935 called the Richter scale. It measure the height of the tallest wave on the seismograph and calculates the magnitude or strength of the earthquake.
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