Name: Volcano and Earthquake Simulation Lab Instructions for
... b. Explain why you think the earthquakes and volcanos happen in the same areas. ...
... b. Explain why you think the earthquakes and volcanos happen in the same areas. ...
FOURTH QUARTER - New Haven Science
... 4. How does the silica content of magma affect the type of landform that is formed? 5. How do volcanic belts form along plate boundaries? d. Essential Concepts 1. Energy from an earthquake travels in waves. The waves can produce severe movement in the Earth’s crust and surface. 2. Scientists use lev ...
... 4. How does the silica content of magma affect the type of landform that is formed? 5. How do volcanic belts form along plate boundaries? d. Essential Concepts 1. Energy from an earthquake travels in waves. The waves can produce severe movement in the Earth’s crust and surface. 2. Scientists use lev ...
FOURTH QUARTER UNIT 7: NATURAL DISASTERS II. UNIT 7
... 4. How does the silica content of magma affect the type of landform that is formed? 5. How do volcanic belts form along plate boundaries? d. Essential Concepts 1. Energy from an earthquake travels in waves. The waves can produce severe movement in the Earth’s crust and surface. 2. Scientists use lev ...
... 4. How does the silica content of magma affect the type of landform that is formed? 5. How do volcanic belts form along plate boundaries? d. Essential Concepts 1. Energy from an earthquake travels in waves. The waves can produce severe movement in the Earth’s crust and surface. 2. Scientists use lev ...
Year 5/6 GRASPS Task: Due Wednesday, 18th March (Week 7
... Describe the scales that are used to measure earthquake magnitude and intensity. Explain that when tectonic plates push into each other, pull apart from each other and slide past each other energy builds up as stress in the plates. Explain how the sudden release of energy causes movement of the gr ...
... Describe the scales that are used to measure earthquake magnitude and intensity. Explain that when tectonic plates push into each other, pull apart from each other and slide past each other energy builds up as stress in the plates. Explain how the sudden release of energy causes movement of the gr ...
Volcano and Earthquake Simulation Lab
... b. Explain why you think the earthquakes and volcanos happen in the same areas. ...
... b. Explain why you think the earthquakes and volcanos happen in the same areas. ...
What have earthquakes to do with the Earth`s climate?
... earthquake occurs, it sends off vibrations (or waves) in all directions. An earthquake wave arrives at the seismological stations at different times. The time differences enable the earthquake to be located. Thus, it becomes possible to draw up an earthquake map similar to Figure 2 below. It ca ...
... earthquake occurs, it sends off vibrations (or waves) in all directions. An earthquake wave arrives at the seismological stations at different times. The time differences enable the earthquake to be located. Thus, it becomes possible to draw up an earthquake map similar to Figure 2 below. It ca ...
Earthquakes – moving facts - Schulbuchzentrum
... yet it was in the small Caribbean country that considerably more people lost their lives. How come? The answer is very simple: Chile is far better prepared for such disasters. Latin America’s most prosperous country has strict building regulations, which are also generally adhered to. And there was ...
... yet it was in the small Caribbean country that considerably more people lost their lives. How come? The answer is very simple: Chile is far better prepared for such disasters. Latin America’s most prosperous country has strict building regulations, which are also generally adhered to. And there was ...
Year 9 Revision
... Earthquakes are vibrations caused by movements at plate margins and at fault lines (cracks in the earth’s surface). ...
... Earthquakes are vibrations caused by movements at plate margins and at fault lines (cracks in the earth’s surface). ...
Earthquakes
... 1. What are the two factors that geologists take into account when they determine earthquake risk? 2. The risk of earthquakes is highest in the United States along the ___________ coast. 3. What kinds of damage are caused by the severe shaking of an earthquake? ...
... 1. What are the two factors that geologists take into account when they determine earthquake risk? 2. The risk of earthquakes is highest in the United States along the ___________ coast. 3. What kinds of damage are caused by the severe shaking of an earthquake? ...
The Haiti Earthquake
... The Haiti Earthquake A shifting of the tectonic plates beneath the city of Léogâne, some 15 kilometres south-west of Port-au-Prince, the capital of Haiti, on January 12th 2010 caused a severe earthquake, magnitude 7.2 on the Richter Scale. The island of Haiti sits on the northern edge of one of the ...
... The Haiti Earthquake A shifting of the tectonic plates beneath the city of Léogâne, some 15 kilometres south-west of Port-au-Prince, the capital of Haiti, on January 12th 2010 caused a severe earthquake, magnitude 7.2 on the Richter Scale. The island of Haiti sits on the northern edge of one of the ...
Earthquake Building Codes
... Earth Science this year we took time to learn about earthquakes in a unit that also involved tectonic plates, plate boundaries, and the orogeny of mountains. We all should pretty much be experts because of how much we talked about this. ...
... Earth Science this year we took time to learn about earthquakes in a unit that also involved tectonic plates, plate boundaries, and the orogeny of mountains. We all should pretty much be experts because of how much we talked about this. ...
Powerpoint
... Know the three different kinds of seismic waves, and their characteristic motion, and properties of propagation. How is an earthquake epicenter located? Earthquake depth and how they are related to different kinds of plate boundaries and increasing distance from a subduction zone. Know the Richt ...
... Know the three different kinds of seismic waves, and their characteristic motion, and properties of propagation. How is an earthquake epicenter located? Earthquake depth and how they are related to different kinds of plate boundaries and increasing distance from a subduction zone. Know the Richt ...
Earthquakes
... from different seismograph set up at stations all over the world. The point where the 3 circles intersect is the location of the epicenter. ...
... from different seismograph set up at stations all over the world. The point where the 3 circles intersect is the location of the epicenter. ...
Scientific level COMPUTER | EARTHQUAKE SIMULATION THE
... THE CAUSES OF EARTHQUAKES An earthquake is a vibration that travels through the earth’s crust and affects a fairly large area, such as an entire city. Earthquakes can be caused by: ...
... THE CAUSES OF EARTHQUAKES An earthquake is a vibration that travels through the earth’s crust and affects a fairly large area, such as an entire city. Earthquakes can be caused by: ...
Test 5: Chapter 9 - Volcanoes and Earthquakes
... 4. Magma that is rich in gases will form a volcano that __________________ explosively. 5. Volcanoes with gentle slopes made from basalt are ___________________ volcanoes 6. Large, steep-sided volcanoes made of lava and ash are ________________ volcanoes 7. Small, steep-sided volcanoes made of basal ...
... 4. Magma that is rich in gases will form a volcano that __________________ explosively. 5. Volcanoes with gentle slopes made from basalt are ___________________ volcanoes 6. Large, steep-sided volcanoes made of lava and ash are ________________ volcanoes 7. Small, steep-sided volcanoes made of basal ...
Earthquakes
... sudden shock of the earth’s surface. They are the Earth's natural means of releasing stress. More than a million earthquakes rattle the world each year. The West Coast is most at risk of having an earthquake, but earthquakes can happen in the Midwest and along the East Coast. Earthquakes can be felt ...
... sudden shock of the earth’s surface. They are the Earth's natural means of releasing stress. More than a million earthquakes rattle the world each year. The West Coast is most at risk of having an earthquake, but earthquakes can happen in the Midwest and along the East Coast. Earthquakes can be felt ...
View powerpoint - Deyes High School
... earthquake proof buildings. Since 1981 all new buildings in Japan have had to be earthquake proof. It is also common to have disaster plans to tell people in an emergency ...
... earthquake proof buildings. Since 1981 all new buildings in Japan have had to be earthquake proof. It is also common to have disaster plans to tell people in an emergency ...
Earthquake Summary Sheet
... it as “normal” to go down a sliding board b. Reverse fault: rocks collide (convergent boundary) and one side of the fault gets pushed up think of it as the “reverse” of going down a sliding board c. Strike slip fault: rocks are sheared and slide past one another (transform boundary) 8. Richter Sca ...
... it as “normal” to go down a sliding board b. Reverse fault: rocks collide (convergent boundary) and one side of the fault gets pushed up think of it as the “reverse” of going down a sliding board c. Strike slip fault: rocks are sheared and slide past one another (transform boundary) 8. Richter Sca ...
Earthquakes and Volcanoes ppt
... seismic waves The point on Earth’s surface directly above an earthquake’s starting point The starting point along a fault ...
... seismic waves The point on Earth’s surface directly above an earthquake’s starting point The starting point along a fault ...
Geology 101 minutes to complete the 50-point quiz. first sentence
... the Pacific Northwest. At a coastal village locality, you find two artifacts: a longboat made from a single tree trunk and a water jar made from local sediment. You have enough research funds to numerically date one of the artifacts. Which material of which artifact would you date? Why? And why woul ...
... the Pacific Northwest. At a coastal village locality, you find two artifacts: a longboat made from a single tree trunk and a water jar made from local sediment. You have enough research funds to numerically date one of the artifacts. Which material of which artifact would you date? Why? And why woul ...
GLOBAL HAZARD revision sheet 2 – how PLATE
... The Gonave platelet The Caribbean plate The Enriquillo- Garden fault Cuba Florida ...
... The Gonave platelet The Caribbean plate The Enriquillo- Garden fault Cuba Florida ...
Magnitude 7.1 SOUTHERN EAST PACIFIC RISE
... century – until today none had been larger than a M 7.0 in March 1920, 400 km south of the this earthquake. ...
... century – until today none had been larger than a M 7.0 in March 1920, 400 km south of the this earthquake. ...
Plate Boundary: Oceanic-Continental
... sink it causes melting, that creates molten rock. When this molten rock is beneath earth’s surface it is called magma and it moves around while underneath the crust until eruption. When two tectonic plates collide the denser plate submerges under the continental crust. This causes the production of ...
... sink it causes melting, that creates molten rock. When this molten rock is beneath earth’s surface it is called magma and it moves around while underneath the crust until eruption. When two tectonic plates collide the denser plate submerges under the continental crust. This causes the production of ...
Earthquake
An earthquake (also known as a quake, tremor or temblor) is the perceptible shaking of the surface of the Earth, which can be violent enough to destroy major buildings and kill thousands of people. The severity of the shaking can range from barely felt to violent enough to toss people around. Earthquakes have destroyed whole cities. They result from the sudden release of energy in the Earth's crust that creates seismic waves. The seismicity, seismism or seismic activity of an area refers to the frequency, type and size of earthquakes experienced over a period of time.Earthquakes are measured using observations from seismometers. The moment magnitude is the most common scale on which earthquakes larger than approximately 5 are reported for the entire globe. The more numerous earthquakes smaller than magnitude 5 reported by national seismological observatories are measured mostly on the local magnitude scale, also referred to as the Richter magnitude scale. These two scales are numerically similar over their range of validity. Magnitude 3 or lower earthquakes are mostly almost imperceptible or weak and magnitude 7 and over potentially cause serious damage over larger areas, depending on their depth. The largest earthquakes in historic times have been of magnitude slightly over 9, although there is no limit to the possible magnitude. The most recent large earthquake of magnitude 9.0 or larger was a 9.0 magnitude earthquake in Japan in 2011 (as of March 2014), and it was the largest Japanese earthquake since records began. Intensity of shaking is measured on the modified Mercalli scale. The shallower an earthquake, the more damage to structures it causes, all else being equal.At the Earth's surface, earthquakes manifest themselves by shaking and sometimes displacement of the ground. When the epicenter of a large earthquake is located offshore, the seabed may be displaced sufficiently to cause a tsunami. Earthquakes can also trigger landslides, and occasionally volcanic activity.In its most general sense, the word earthquake is used to describe any seismic event — whether natural or caused by humans — that generates seismic waves. Earthquakes are caused mostly by rupture of geological faults, but also by other events such as volcanic activity, landslides, mine blasts, and nuclear tests. An earthquake's point of initial rupture is called its focus or hypocenter. The epicenter is the point at ground level directly above the hypocenter.