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Download Volcanoes, Hotspots, and Earthquakes
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Earthquakes, Volcanoes, and Hotspots oh my Objective: Describe how earthquakes waves are generated and how earthquakes waves move throughout the earth. Epicenter & Focus of Earthquakes Epicenter—Location directly above EQ on Earth’s surface. •Focus Focus: or hypocenter; point within Earth where the EQ occurred. Body Waves and Surface Waves Surface waves travel along Earth’s surface. Body waves (P and S) travel inside Earth. While P- and S- waves radiate outward in all directions, surface waves travel along the surface of the earth and decrease in amplitude with depth. Earthquake prediction eludes us. EQ forecasting is more realistic and perhaps more useful. (Probability of an earthquake) What is the difference? Possibility of a 6.7 EQ along the San Andreas fault based off Historical earthquakes in specific locations. • Tension- force that pulls on the crust resulting in the center becoming thinner • Gum being pulled apart • Compression- force that squeezes a rock until it folds or breaks • Trash compactor • Shearing-force that pushes a mass of rock in two opposite directions • Deformation = any change in volume or shape of Earth’s crust Sketch TYPES OF STRESS in notes! TOO Much Stress!!!! • Fault (Plate Boundaries + many more) obreak in the crust oslabs of crust slip past each other oThink of breaking a candy bar in two… first it will bend and stretch, but with enough stress it will snap Strike-Slip Fault • Caused by shearing motion • Associated with transform plate boundary • Example oSan Andreas Fault The average rate of motion across the San Andreas Fault Zone during the past 3 million years is 56 mm/yr (2 in/yr). This is about the same rate at which your fingernails grow. Assuming this rate continues, scientists project that Los Angeles and San Francisco will be adjacent to one another in approximately 15 million years. Strike-slip Volcanoes Volcan Masaya, Nicaragua What is a volcano? vent cone conduit • Volcano is a vent or 'chimney' that connects molten rock (magma) from within the Earth’s crust to the Earth's surface. • Includes the surrounding cone of erupted material. magma chamber Volcanoes are formed by: - Subduction - Rifting - Hotspots How and why do volcanoes erupt? • Hot, molten rock (magma) has a lower density than surrounding rock and rises due to convection. Magma works its way through cracks in the crust to the surface. • Large amounts of gas and a high viscosity (sticky) create explosive eruption! • Small amounts of gas and (or) low viscosity (runny) magma will form an effusive eruption What is Volcanic Activity? • An opening in Earth’s crust through which molten rock, ash & pumice (pyroclastics) and gases erupt. • The landform that develops around the opening. • A way for Earth to release heat energy from the interior due to radioactive decay. -TWO KINDS -Explosive: where rapidly escaping gas bubbles (= vesicles) rip apart the magma, fragmenting it. -Effusive: where the D. Peebles magma leaks out onto the surface passively as lava flows. Volcanic Hazards • • • • • • Courtesy of www.swisseduc.ch Pyroclastic flow Lahars/Mud flows Pyroclastic fall Lava flow Noxious Gas Earthquakes What are the Types of Volcanoes? Composite (Stratovolcano) Shield G. Vaughn USGS Mt. St. Helens, WA Mauna Loa, HW Cinder A. Heisey Sunset Crater, AZ How Do Volcanoes Differ? • Size • Shape • Composition • Location Tarbuck & Lutgens Shield Volcanoes • Small amt. pyroclastics (cinders, ash) • nonexplosive eruptions • Hot spots and ridges (mantle material) • Structure • Slope 1-5o • Most form Islands • ocean to ocean convergence. Tarbuck & Lutgens Cinder Cones • Large amt. pyroclastics • Structure • Slope - 30o to 40o • 100-1000 ft height • Deep crater A. Heisey Tarbuck & Lutgens Cinder Cones Pelee’s Cinder Cone, HW Fire Fountain=Pyroclastics USGS G. Lewis USGS G. Lewis USGS G. Lewis Parasitic Cone Composite(Stratovolcano) Volcanoes • Large amt. pyroclastics • Viscous lavas • Explosive / catastrophic eruptions • Subduction boundaries • Structure • Symmetrical cone • Steep summit, gentle flanks, Slope 10-40o+ • Ring of Fire • Massive earthquakes M. Giannechini Pomerape & Parinacota, Chile Pacific Ring of Fire Hotspot volcanoes Volcano Monitoring Volcano Observatories are set up on all active volcanoes that threaten the human population. These are designed to monitor and potentially to predict the eruptive behaviour of the volcano in question. What are Hotspot Volcanoes? • Hot mantle plumes breaching the surface in the middle of a tectonic plate The Hawaiian island chain are examples of hotspot volcanoes. Photo: Tom Pfeiffer / www.volcanodiscovery.com The tectonic plate moves over a fixed hotspot forming a chain of volcanoes. The volcanoes get younger from one end to the other. Yellowstone National Park North American Plate slowly moving southwest over existing hotspot Seismic Activity • Earthquake activity commonly precedes an eruption • Result of magma pushing up towards the surface • Increase volume of material in the volcano shatters the rock • This causes earthquakes Quiz 8. ________ is made of the crust and upper mantle. 9. What are the 3 types of plate boundaries? 10. What are the 3 types of faults? 11. What causes a fault? 12.What is the location directly above an earthquake on Earth’s surface?