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Seismicity Seismicity Causes of EQs Distribution Primary Soil liquefaction, Landslides/Avalanches, Effects on people and the built environment Mag & Freq Effects Secondary Tsunamis Causes of Earthquakes • As the crust of the Earth is mobile, there tends to be a slow build up of stress within the rocks. • When this pressure is suddenly released, parts of the surface experience an intense shaking motion that lasts for just a few seconds. • This is an earthquake. Causes of Earthquakes • The point at which the pressure of an earthquake is released occurs within the crust and is known as the focus. • The point immediately above the focus, on the Earth’s surface, is known as the epicentre. • The depth of the focus is important and 3 categories of earthquake are recognised: 1. Shallow focus (0-70km deep) these tend to cause the greatest damage and account for 75% of all the earthquake energy released. 2. Intermediate focus (70-300km deep) 3. Deep focus (300-700km deep) • Seismic waves radiate from the focus rather like the ripples in water when a rock is thrown into a pond. • Fig 1.26 • Primary (P) waves travel faster and are more compressional, vibrating in the direction in which they are travelling. They are also refracted when they pass through a medium. • Secondary (S) waves travel at half the speed of P waves and shear rock by vibrating at right angles to the direction of travel. They will also only travel through a solid. • Surface (L) waves travel the slowest and near to the ground surface. Some surface waves shake the ground at right angles to the direction of wave movement and some have a rolling motion that produces vertical ground movement. P and S waves travel through the interior of the Earth and are recorded on a seismograph. Studying earthquakes and the seismic waves they generate has made it possible to build up a picture of the interior of the Earth. Distribution • The vast majority of earthquakes occur along plate boundaries (fig 1.27), the most powerful being associated with destructive margins. • A conservative margins, the boundary is marked by a fault, movement along which produces the earthquake. • Perhaps the most famous is San Andreas fault, California (the boundary between the North American and Pacific plates). • In reality, the San Andreas system consists of a broad complex zone in which there are a number of fractures of the crust. (fig 1.28) • Some earthquakes occur away from plate boundaries and are associated with the reactivation of old fault lines. • 23 Sept 2002, UK midlands, earthquake measuring 4.8 on the Richter Scale. Epicentre: Dudley, West of B’ham • It is believed that the cause was movement along an old fault line known as the Malvern lineament. • It has been suggested that human activity could also be the cause of some minor earthquakes. Examples are the buildings of large reservoirs in which the water puts pressure on the surface rocks, or subsidence of deep mine workings. • Newcastle, Australia (1989) earthquake measuring 5.6 on the Richter Scale and has been attributed to deep coal mining in the region. • 13 people dead, 160+ in hospital, thousands of buildings damaged • Economic losses equivalent to almost A$5 billion, 3.4% of Australia's Gross Domestic Income (GDI) or 80% of the nation's GDI per capita growth. • Just a coincidence? Read article – highlight and annotate as per your own notes. Mag & Freq • Magnitude: measured on two scales: The Richter Scale, which is a logarithmic scale which means that an event measured at 7 on the scale has an amplitude of seismic waves ten times greater than the one measured at 6 on the scale. • The energy release is proportional to the magnitude so that for every unit increase in the scale the energy released increases by approximately 30 times. Mag & Freq • The Mercalli scale measures the intensity of the event and its impact. • It is a 12 point scale that runs from Level I (detected by seismometers but felt by few people, approx 2 on the Richter scale) to Level XII (total destruction and ground visibly shaking, approx. 8.5 on Richter scale). • Seismic records enable earthquake frequency to be observed, but these records only date back to 1848 when an instrument capable of recording seismic waves was first developed. The effects of Earthquakes • Ground Shaking • Severity of this is dependent on: magnitude, distance from epicentre and local geological conditions. • Mexico, 1985, seismic waves were amplified several times by the ancient lake sediments upon which the city is built. 1. Soil Liquefaction When violently shaken, soils with high water content lose their mechanical strength and start to behave like a fluid. 2. Landslides/avalanches Slope failure as a result of ground shaking. 3. Effects on people and the built environment Collapsing buildings, destruction of road systems and other forms of communications, destruction of service provision such as gas, water, electricity transmission systems, flooding, disease, food shortages, disruption to the local economy. Some of the effects on the human environment are short term; others occur over a long period and will depend to a large extent on the ability of the area to recover. 4. Tsunamis 4. Tsunamis • In the open ocean tsunamis have a very long wavelength (sometimes more than 100km) and a low wave height (under 1m). • They travel quickly at speeds greater than 700km/h – some tsunamis take less than a day to cross the Pacific Ocean. • On reaching shallow water bordering land, they increase rapidly in height. 4. Tsunamis • Often the first warning for coastal populations is the wave trough in front of the tsunami which causes a reduction in sea level known as a drawdown. • Behind this comes the tsunami itself which can reach heights in excess of 25m. • The event usually consists of a number of waves, the largest not necessarily being the first. 4. Tsunamis When a tsunami reaches land, its effects will depend upon: 1. The height of the waves and the distance they have travelled 2. The length of the event that caused the tsunami 3. The extent to which warnings can be/were given 4. Coastal physical geography, both offshore and in the coastal area 5. Coastal land use and population density 4. Tsunamis • The wave will wash boats and wooden coastal structures inland and then the backwash may carry them back out to sea. • Both the water itself and the debris that it carries cause drowning and injuries. • The effects of most tsunamis are felt at least 500600 m inland depending on the coastal geography. • Buildings, roads, bridges, harbour structures, trees and even soil are washed away. • Tsunamis generated by the explosion of volcano Krakatoa in 1883 are estimated to have drowned more than 35,000 people and produced waves that travelled around the world, the highest being over 40m. 4. Tsunamis • Around 90% of all tsunamis are generated within the Pacific basin and are associated with the tectonic activity taking place around its edges. • Most are generated at convergent plate boundaries where subduction is taking place, particularly off the Japan-Taiwan island arc (25% of all events). • Since the devastating tsunami of Dec 2004 (case study), the area has been affected by at least two major tsunamis: 1. July 2006, south Java coast, generated by an earthquake of mag 7.7 on the Richter scale 180km offshore – 600 deaths 2. April 2007, Solomon islands – at least 15 deaths 4. Tsunamis • The geological evidence indicates that huge tsunamis have affected areas such as the Mediterranean basin (e.g. the Santorini eruption around 1450BC) and the North Sea area. • Around 7250BP* the Storegga slide caused by huge submarine debris slides off Norway, produced tsunamis more than 6m high in Scotland and other areas bordering the N Sea. • It is believed that these tsunamis continued across the Atlantic to affect the coastlines of Spitsbergen, Iceland and Greenland. *BP = before present, standard practice is to use 1 January 1950 as commencement date of the age scale, reflecting the fact that radiocarbon dating became practical in the 1950s