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Y10 Earthquakes Geological processes Meulaboh – the epicentre Earthquake video What is an earthquake? What happens in an earthquake? What is the effects of an earthquake on the community? What should you do in an earthquake? What shouldn’t you do? A rupture along a fault line Earthquake commission Fix. Fasten. Forget. Secure hot water cylinders and header tanks Check that your house is secured to its foundations Secure your chimney with galvanised metal bands Secure tall furniture to the wall studs Secure wood burners to the floor Store heavy objects low down Use non-slip mats under smaller appliances and objects Use plastic putty (Blu Tack) to secure ornaments Push picture and mirror hooks closed Have flexible gas and plumbing fittings installed. What to do during an Earthquake Follow this link for ideas what to do in an earthquake FEMA: What to Do During an Earthquake Te Anau Earthquake video Click on the links below Earthquakes - Earthquake damage, Te Anau - Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand Earthquake Definitions An earthquake is vibrations of the Earth produced by the rapid release of energy. Surface rocks of the Earth’s crust are brittle and can break when put under pressure. Deeper rocks bend under pressure as they are not so brittle. Focus, epicentre and fault Focus – the point where the rock breaks in the Earth’s crust. Epicentre – The point on the Earth’s crust directly above the focus. Fault – break in the rocks of the crust where the two sides of the break have moved relative to each other. Fault, focus and Epicentre Active faults Many fault lines cut the ground’s surface in New Zealand; each past fault movement would have been accompanied by a large earthquake. Those that are considered likely to move again in the future are called active faults. They are known to have ruptured the ground surface once or more in the last 120,000 years. This map effectively shows the areas where future earthquakes are most likely. Questions Why do Earthquakes occur in the crust and not deeper in the mantle? What is the difference between focus and epicentre? Weblink to show NZ earthquakes Click on the link below. Earthquakes - New Zealand earthquakes, 1990–94 - Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand New Zealand regions at greatest risk of ground shaking The difference between each level is 10%. What do you notice about the distribution of more severe earthquakes? The 1848 Marlborough Earthquake and 1929 Murchison Earthquake. Click on the links below Historic earthquakes - The 1848 Marlborough earthquake - Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand Historic earthquakes - The 1929 Arthur’s Pass and Murchison earthquakes - Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand Earthquakes - Seismic Waves Waves travel outwards from the focus Three types, in the order they arrive: 1. P Waves (primary) – longitudinal waves causing compression and extension of rocks. Moves through solid an liquid. 2. S waves (secondary) – transverse waves sideways and vertical shaking. Can’t move through liquids. 3. Surface waves – slow. Travel through crust like ocean waves. Cause most damage. Earthquake wave animation Earthquakes - Primary and secondary waves - Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand#breadcrumbtop Seismologists Seismologist are scientists who study Earthquakes. Seismographs are instruments which record seismic waves. Seismograms are the recordings they make. A seismograph seismograph A seismogram Seismologist, ha ha! Finding an epicentre Seismologist use the time interval between the arrival of the P and S waves to determine their distance from the epicentre. When the arrival times of P and S waves from three seismographs in different locations are recorded, the epicentre can be calculated. Measuring Earthquakes Measured by Intensity and Magnitude Intensity – Mercalli scale – based on people’s experiences and effects on buildings and the environment. Magnitude – Richter scale – based on amount of energy released. Measurements of ground movements and seismographs. Damage from Earthquakes Depends on size, distance from focus, type of rock, strength of buildings and depth. Richter scale – not linear, each step releases 30x more energy. Make your own seismograph Make an earthquake and bring in your seismograph and seismogram Earth’s Structure Structure of Earth Crust - 6km thick under oceans – solid - up to 70 km thick under continents. Av: 30-40 km Mantle- 3 000 km thick – plastic – flows - upper 100 km – rigid Outer core – 2,300 km thick – liquid Inner core – 1,200 km thick - solid The bits Continental crust is under the continents, its light and floats on the mantle. Oldest rocks. Oceanic crust is heavier, thinner, less buoyant, sinks into mantle. Mantle rock is hot and under pressure so isn’t actually melted. Core is mainly iron and nickel. Circulation of iron produces magnetic field. Tectonic plates Tectonic plates in 3D Convection currents in mantle Heat from the core heats the magma causing it to rise towards the crust in currents which push on the plates, moving them. What happens when plates move? Spreading zones – plates move apart at mid-oceanic ridges. Magma rises to form new crust in the gaps. Where does the old oceanic crust go? Collision zones – plates collide at boundaries. Rocks can fold into mountains like the Southern Alps. Earthquakes common Subduction – a less dense oceanic plates goes in under a continential coast – east of the North Island. Subduction of the pacific plate under the north island Mountain building – folding rocks Movement of tectonic plates Plate boundaries through New Zealand. The pacific plate is subducting under the Australian in the north and colliding in the south. Valley formed by the subsidence of a block of the Earth's crust between two or more parallel faults. Rift valleys are steepsided and form where the crust is being pulled apart, as at mid-ocean ridges, or in the Great Rift Valley of East Africa. Active volcanoes of the Pacific The Geological History of NZ Gondwana NZ was formed off the coast of the great southern supercontinent – Gondwana. The oldest rocks in NZ are about 500 MY old. 150 mya Rocks formed from sediments eroded off gondwana are uplifted due to a subduction zone forming. Greywacke forming at the edge of Gondwana This is the sediments that make the rocks building up off the coast of Gondwana. 70 mya Spreading ridge in future tasman sea starts NZ moving away on its long journey. 10 mya NZ starts to take shape. Land mass is large, one island. Tectonic collisions are similar today. Research How do we know that NZ was once past of Gondwana? What was the climate like? What sort of life lived on Gondwana? How long were the Southern continents together before they separated? What caused NZ to separate from Gondwana? What are some species of plants and animals whose ancestors were on NZ when it separated? Local features and geological formations Alpine fault and Wairau fault The alpine fault branches into the Wairau fault that passes through Marlborough. It is a break in the Earth’s crust caused by the collision of the Australian and Pacific plates. Collision of tectonic plates causes mountain building around the fault. The Wairau fault divides Marlborough and is still active. The Wairau earthquake of 1848 caused subsidence of 5 ft in the lower Wairau Valley and was widely felt throughout the southern part of the North Island. The Sounds are flooded river valleys. The alpine fault on the East of the Alps Marlborough Sounds - flooded valleys When the strong tidal currents of Cook Strait flow through the narrow entrances of the Marlborough Sounds, complex currents are produced. Whirls and current paths are visible in this photograph, taken from space. The waters seen here have different levels of turbidity (sediment held in suspension). Marlborough rocks Many of the rocks that form Marlborough are sedimentary rocks like greywacke, formed in the oceans off the coast of Gondwana. Schist is commonly found – a metamorphic rock that makes up the mountains surrounding us. It was formed deep in the Earth when the plates were colliding. We can see the rocks because colliding plates has pushed them up out of the ocean and the rocks covering them have been eroded away. Marlborough Schist from Queen Charlotte sounds – a metamorphic rock. Marine Fossils Fossils can be found in many Marlborough rocks. When organisms died their skeletons were fossilised in the rocks then uplifted and exposed. Coastal areas such as Marlborough have only been pushed up to become land in the last 50,000 years so we don’ have many old fossils. Rich deposits of beautifully preserved Pleistocene sea shell fossils can be found at Motunau Beach (Marlborough). They are evidence for shallow, sandy bottom seas. Erosion in action Weathering Earth's surface is constantly being shaped and reshaped by natural processes like earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, weathering and erosion. Weathering causes rocks at Earth's surface to fragment, crack, crumble, or otherwise degrade due to physical, chemical, or biological interactions. Because different kinds of rocks form in different settings, they react differently when exposed to temperature swings, moisture in the air, or pressure changes. Formation of a V-shaped valley V-shaped valleys are found in the upper course (mountainous) part of a river. Vertical erosion creates a steep narrow gorge. The sides of the gorge are made less steep by the weathering creating a V shape. Any material that falls from the valleys sides usually rolls into the river below and when the velocity of the river is fast enough the material is transported away. The animation below shows this process: V shaped valley Erosion Erosion loosens and carries away rock debris formed by weathering. Without erosive agents, including water, wind, and glaciers, rock debris would accumulate where it formed. Moving water is the most potent erosive force on Earth. Powered by the force of gravity, the world's rivers deliver about 20 billion tons of loose rock fragments, or sediment, to the oceans each year. Moving air, or wind, is another important transporter of sediment, especially in dry regions. When tiny sand grains are lifted and carried by the wind, the wind also becomes an erosive agent, capable of sculpting rocks into a variety of shapes, as evidenced in the still images Glacier A glacier is a frozen flowing river that moves slowly, retreating in summer and growing in winter. (Franz Joseph) Terraces Terraces are produced by erosion. The pink and white terraces of Rotorua distroyed in the 1888 eruption of Mt Tarawera Moraines A moraine is found at the base of a glacier where large rocks and sediments (glacial drift) are deposited after being transported by the glacier A moraine at the base of the Southern Alps A end moraine in Canada Fiords A long narrow inlet with steep sides created in a valley that was created by glacial activity. The Southern sounds are actually fiords. These areas were once glaciated. Fiordland Rocks and the Rock Cycle Sedimentary Rocks Sedimentary – formed from eroded sediments off other rocks that are washed down into river, lakes and oceans, deposited on the sea floor. Pressure and chemicals cement them together. We see them when plate movements push them up. Eg, greywacke, limestone (fossils), sandstone, mudstone, conglomerate. Igneous Rocks Harder rocks that form from magma that solidifies. Extrusive or volcanic form from lava that comes out of Earth. Cool quick some small crystals. Eg, scoria, pumice, obsidian Intrusive or plutonic form from lava that cools slowly inside crust – larger crystals. Eg, granite. Metamorphic Rocks Any rock can change into a metamorphic rock. Formed by deep burial of rocks in the crust. Caused by intense heat and or pressure Rocks recrystalise and become hard. Often attractive, contain gems Eg, pounamu, marble Rock cycle Interactive Rock Cycle Animation All done congratulations