Lecture 5 - Earthquake Faulting and Seismic Waves Flashcards

1
Q

What indicates that slip (relative displacement) has occurred along linear faults?

A

Surface ruptures usually generated by large earthquakes.

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2
Q

How far can faulting in large earthquakes can be traced?

A

tens-to-hundreds of kilometres

Earthquakes do not occur at points or along lines

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3
Q

Faults are ……

A

planar

rare exposures show striations and corrugations indicating the direction of slip

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4
Q

What are the three types of faulting?

A

reverse/thrust
normal
strike-slip

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5
Q

How do reverse or thrust faults rupture?

A

Due to horizontal compressive stress. One side is thrust over the other as the two blocks move together, leading to shortening (contraction) and crustal thickening.

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6
Q

What are some examples of reverse/thrust faulting?

A

1999 M 7.3 Chi-chi earthquake, Taiwan.
Main Himalayan Thrust in Nepal - responsible for raising the Himalayas!
Cascadia megathrust fault.

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7
Q

What is a fault scarp?

A

Where the thrust overhang has collapsed.

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8
Q

Where do reverse/thrust faulting earthquakes usually occur?

A

Convergent plate boundaries: subduction zones and continental collision zones.

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9
Q

How do normal faults rupture?

A

Due to horizontal tension stress. One side of the fault slides down the other as the two blocks move apart, leading to extension and crustal thinning.

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10
Q

What are some examples of normal faulting?

A

1959 M 7.3 Hebgen Lake earthquake, Montana.

2016 M 6.6 Norcia earthquake, Italy.

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11
Q

Where do normal faulting earthquakes usually occur?

A

Divergent plate boundaries: mid-ocean ridges and continental rifts. However, under certain circumstances they also occur in subduction zones and continental collisions.

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12
Q

How do strike-slip faults rupture?

A

Due to simple shear. The two sides move laterally past one another. There is shortening in one direction and extension in another, but no crustal thickening or thinning.

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13
Q

A strike-slip fault is left-lateral if….

A

the motion of the opposite side is to the left

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14
Q

A strike-slip fault is right-lateral if….

A

the motion of the opposite side is to the right

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15
Q

What are some examples of strike-slip faulting?

A

2019 M 7.1 Ridgecrest, CA earthquake (right-lateral).

2016 M 7.0 Kumamoto earthquake, Japan (right-lateral).

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16
Q

Where do strike-slip faulting earthquakes usually occur?

A

On strike-slip plate boundaries, including oceanic transform faults and continental shear zones.
However, they also occur within continental collision zones and subduction zone fore-arcs.

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17
Q

What are oblique faults?

A

Faults that have a component of reverse or normal slip and a component of strike-slip.

18
Q

What is stick-slip behaviour?

A

Faults exhibit stick slip behaviour. The fault is “stuck” between earthquakes, until stresses overcome friction and the sides “slip”.

19
Q

What is the earthquake cycle?

A

It describes how stress builds up on a fault over long periods of time – driven by plate tectonics – and is then released in an earthquake taking just a few seconds.

20
Q

What happens during the interseismic period of the earthquake cycle?

A

Steady motion occurs away from the fault but the fault itself is “locked”.

21
Q

What happens during the coseismic phase of the earthquake cycle?

A

The earthquake and elastic rebound.

22
Q

What happens during the earthquake cycle at subduction zone megathrusts?

A

It involves vertical as well as horizontal motions.
During the interseismic period, the lower plate slowly subducts and the megathrust is locked. At the trench the upper plate is dragged downwards, but at the coast it contracts and bulges upwards.
During the coseismic phase, these motions are reversed. The mega- thrust slips, the upper plate rebounds westwards, the sea-floor at the trench is suddenly uplifted and the coastline subsides.

23
Q

What are two types of body waves?

A

Primary compressional P-waves

Secondary shear S-waves

24
Q

What are two types of surface waves?

A

Love waves

Rayleigh waves

25
Q

How are seismic waves recorded?

A

By seismometers or seismographs, highly- sensitive instruments that measure and amplify ground motions.

26
Q

What is a seismogram?

A

A graphical representation of ground velocity at a point in space (the seismometer) as a function of time.

27
Q

How do p-waves and s-waves help to determine Earth’s interior structure?

A

Refraction and reflection of body waves by major boundaries within the Earth allows us to determine its interior structure.

28
Q

How can we pinpoint the epicentre of an earthquake?

A

By combining distances for three (or more) seismometers.

29
Q

How do we calculate the distance between a seismometer and an earthquake?

A

[VpVs(Ts- Tp)] / [Vp-Vs] = x
Where; Ts-Tp is the separation time between p-waves and s-waves, x is distance, Vp is the velocity of the p-waves and Vs is the velocity of the s-waves.

30
Q

How deep do fault planes typically reach?

A

around 15km

Normally the only part of the crust cool enough to be brittle.

31
Q

What is the seismogenic zone?

A

The area containing fault planes.

32
Q

What is the rupture area?

A

The part of the fault plane that slips in an earthquake.

33
Q

What is a surface rupture?

A

Where the rupture area intersects the surface.

34
Q

What is the hypocentre?

A

The point on the fault plane where slip starts.

35
Q

What is the epicentre?

A

The point at the surface directly above the hypocentre.

36
Q

When are body waves and surface waves released?

A

When slip in an earthquake releases elastic strain stored in the crust as seismic waves.
Body waves pass through the body of earth and surface waves travel around Earth’s surface.

37
Q

What are the characteristics of p-waves?

A

Particle motion in the direction of wave travel.
Very fast.
Cause little damage.

38
Q

What are the characteristics of s-waves?

A

Particle motion perpendicular to the direction of wave travel.
Slower than p-waves but still much faster than the surface waves.
Cause little damage.

39
Q

What are the characteristics of Love waves?

A

Particle motion perpendicular to the direction of wave travel.
Slower than body waves but much more damaging.

40
Q

What are the characteristics of Rayleigh waves?

A

Involve elliptical particle motion in the direction of wave travel.
Slower than body waves but much more damaging.