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Chapter 6 Earthquakes Ch. 6.1 Earthquakes and Plate Tectonics • Earthquakes—vibrations of the earth’s crust. • Earthquakes normally occur along faults, or fractures in the crust where the rock moves. • A fault is normally “locked,” or pressed together tightly, until stress overcomes the pressure holding it together, and the rocks suddenly grind past each other. • The vibrations that result are felt and recorded as earthquakes. • The vibrations are released as energy known as seismic waves. • The movement of rock may cause pressure on other rock, which then breaks and releases more energy (aftershocks). • Focus—the point along a fault where slippage of rock (the rock breaks) first occurs. Usually underground. • Epicenter—the point on the earth’s surface directly above the focus. • Seismic waves radiate outward in all directions from the focus. • 90% of earthquakes have a shallow focus, within 70 km of earth’s surface. • 70 km to 300 km…intermediate focus. • 300 km to 650 km…deep focus, in subduction zones. • The most damaging earthquakes usually have a shallow focus. • stop • Because they occur in subduction zones, intermediate and deep focus earthquakes usually occur further inland than shallow focus ones. Elastic Rebound Theory • Stress on rocks will slightly bend rock, but too much stress will cause the rock to break, and it will spring back to its original shape. Major Earthquake Zones • Most earthquakes occur at lithospheric plate boundaries. • The earth has 3 major earthquake zones. • 1. The Pacific Ring of Fire. • 2. Along mid-ocean ridges. • 3. The Eurasian-Melanesian mountain belt. Major Earthquake Zones Pacific Ring of Fire • Fault zones—group of interconnected faults at plate boundaries. Example: San Andreas fault, which extends almost the length of California. • A major earthquake occurred in the central United States in 1812, far from any known plate boundary. • Evidence reveals an ancient but now inactive plate boundary in the central U.S. • Instead of breaking apart, the North American continent is being compressed by the actively spreading Atlantic Ocean.