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NAME Period Earth’s Interior & Earthquakes STUDY GUIDE 1.) What is the name of the surface along which rocks break when too much force is applied? Fault 2.) What is the name for the vibrations produced by the breaking of rock? Earthquake – seismic waves 3.) In which kind of fault does the rock above the fault (the hanging wall) move downward? Normal 4.) In which kind of fault does the rock above the fault (the hanging wall) move upward? Reverse 5.) Which kind of fault features rocks moving past each other with little upward movement? Strike-Slip Fault 6.) What type of force is associated with Normal faults? Tension 7.) What type of force is associated with Reverse faults? Compression 8.) What type of force is associated with Transform or Strike-Slip faults? Shear 9.) What is the name of the actual location under the surface of the Earth where the rocks break in an earthquake? Focus 10.) What is the name of the spot on the Earth’s surface directly above where the earthquake takes place? Epicenter 11.) How many seismograph stations are needed to locate an epicenter? three 12.) What information is needed in order to use a graph to find out how far away an earthquake is from a seismograph station? The amount of time between the arrival of P and S Waves 13.) Which seismic waves are the slowest and the most destructive?Surface 14.) What tool is used to measure an earthquake? seismograph 15.) What is the name of the paper data record that is produced by a seismograph? seismogram 16.) Which scale is used to describe the strength of an earthquake quantitatively? Richter 17.) Which scale is used to describe the damage caused by an earthquake qualitatively? Mercalli 18.) How many earthquakes do scientists record in an average day? Thousands (2600) [~16 each year that are 7.0+] 19.) What phenomenon is caused when shaking earth begins to behave more like a liquid causing buildings to sink into the soil? Liquefaction 20.) What is the name for ocean waves caused by earthquakes? tsunami 21.) Which type of seismic wave compresses and expands the earth in the direction of the wave? P wave 22.) Which type of seismic wave moves the earth at right angles to the direction of the wave? S wave 23.) Which type of seismic wave is a combination of P and S waves and moves land in a rolling and swaying motion? Surface 24.) Which wave can go through the outer core? P wave 25.) Which wave goes through the mantle, but is blocked by the liquid outer core? S wave 26.) What happens to waves when they enter the liquid outer core? They slow and bend (refract) 27.) Which seismic waves are the fastest? P waves 28.) What is the name for the part of the Earth where no seismic waves are detected from a given earthquake? Shadow zone 29.) Why are there more earthquakes on the west coast of the US than there are on the east coast? There is a plate boundary there 30.) Why don’t S-Waves show up in the shadow zone? They are blocked by the liquid outer core 31.) Why don’t P-Waves show up in the shadow zone? They are bent by the liquid outer core 32.) What are the four main layers of Earth’s interior? Crust, mantle, outer core, inner core 33.) What two layers are used to describe the solid and semi-solid nature of the mantle and crust? Lithosphere, asthenosphere 34.) Which layer(s) have humans actually seen? Crust only 35.) Which layers make up the lithosphere? Crust and upper mantle 36.) Which layers make up the asthenosphere? Mantle only 37.) Of the asthenosphere and lithosphere, which is thicker? asthenosphere 38.) More dense? asthenosphere 39.) More solid? Lithosphere 40.) What are the two kinds of crust? Continental and oceanic 41.) Which rock type would you expect to find in the seafloor? basalt 42.) Which rock type would you expect to dominate on land? granite 43.) Which type of crust is thicker? continental 44.) More dense? oceanic 45.) Explain (in more than one complete sentence) how seismic waves provide the indirect evidence for our understanding of the Earth’s layers. Since we cannot see the layers of the Earth, we must rely on indirect evidence. The fact that a shadow zone occurs when sensing earthquakes, tells us that there is a layer within that is blocking some waves and bending others. Also, the speed of waves change as they pass through different layers within the earth. In addition, the Earth’s magnetic field tells scientists that a large amount of liquid metal must be present in the core. 46.) What are two units for density? g/mL and g/cm3 47.) Why do we need two units for density? Volume can be measured in two different ways. Also, 1cm3 = 1mL 48.) What two things must you measure in order to determine an object’s density? Mass and volume 49.) What is the formula for density? D= m / v OR D=m÷v 50.) If you compute an object’s density, how can you know if it will sink or float? If it is greater than 1g/mL, it will sink. If it is less than 1g/mL, it will float. 51.) How does density usually change with temperature? As temperature increases, density decreases. 52.) Name an exception to this rule (a cold solid that has a lower density than its liquid form). Ice is colder, and so it should be more dense (and sink in water), but it floats. Crust Mantle Outer Core Inner Core 0-40 40-2800 2800-5200 5200-6400 Thickness (km) Temp (ºC) 40 2760 2400 1200 <700 <2800 <5200 5200+ Elements Silicon, oxygen Solid Magnesium Iron, Nickel Mostly Iron Solid & Liquid Hot melted rock 2nd least dense Liquid Solid Molten metal 2nd most dense Solid ball of metal Most dense Depth (km) State (solid/liquid) Description Thin outer shell Relative Least dense Density