Earthquakes Flashcards

1
Q

What are earthquakes

A

Earthquakes are sudden tremors or vibrations in the Earth’s crust.

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2
Q

How do earthquakes occur

A

When plates are pressing against (colliding with) or sliding past each other, there can be a build-up of pressure along the fault line. When the plates move, the sudden release of pressure results in an earthquake.

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3
Q

What is the focus

A

The point beneath the surface where the earthquake happens

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4
Q

What is the epicentre

A

The point on the surface directly above the focus is called the epicentre. The tremors or vibrations are strongest here and they reduce in strength the farther away you move from the epicentre. Therefore, the greatest damage occurs close to the epicentre.

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5
Q

What are aftershocks

A

The smaller tremors that follow an earthquake are called aftershocks.

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6
Q

What is the person who measures an earthquake callled

A

seismologist.

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7
Q

What instruments to seismologist. Use

A

seismographs to measure tremors in the Earth’s crust.

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8
Q

What is used to show the strength of the earthquake

A

The Richter scale,

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9
Q

Damaged cause by earthquake 4 things

A

There is loss of life.
Buildings are damaged or collapse
Damage to electricity lines or gas pipelines may cause fires.
Damage to sewers and water supplies may cause the spread of disease.

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10
Q

What did the earthquake In Japan measure on the Richter scale

A

8.9

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11
Q

When did the earthquake in Japan occur

A

hit Japan on 11 March, 2011

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12
Q

What did the earthquake cause

A

it caused a powerful tsunami that reached heights of over 40 metres. More than 130,000 buildings collapsed and a further million buildings were damaged. Fifteen thousand people died and 4.4 million households in northern Japan were left without electricity and water. The earthquake and tsunami also damaged a nuclear power plant.

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13
Q

3 short term responses for earthquakes

A

Temporary camps were set up for the people left homeless
Emergency rescue teams searched for survivors and recovered thousands of bodies.
Other countries offered emergency aid.

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14
Q

3 long term responses of earthquakes

A

• Electricity and water supplies were restored.
• Roads and airports were repaired.
• Houses and other buildings were repaired or rebuilt.

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15
Q

What was the total cost after the earthquake

A

The total cost was estimated at around €230 billion.

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16
Q

2 ways on how the reduce earthquake damage

A

• Conduct earthquake and tsunami drills so people will know what to do if an earthquake occurs.
• Put early-warning systems in place to alert people to the possibility of a tsunami following an earthquake.

17
Q

What are Sliding plates

A

Plates that slide past each other have passive boundaries. Crust is neither created nor destroyed.
These plates are locked together and then release a huge amount of energy when they slide past each other. Sliding plates cause earthquakes and fault lines.