Earthquakes and Volcanoes The Restless Earth PDF
Earthquakes and Volcanoes The Restless Earth PDF
Earthquakes and Volcanoes The Restless Earth PDF
S S E EArtH L t S E ER
E S L T S S E E ARTH R E H T
Contents
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The Underlying and Shifting Earth The What and Where of Earthquakes Earthquake Science Undersea Earthquakes and Tsunamis Volcanoes Across The Globe Volcano Science Volcanic Hazards and Reducing Risk Glossary Bibliography Further Reading Picture Credits Index About the Author
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The Underlying and Shifting Earth
FOR MOST PEOPLE, THE GROUND BENEATH THEIR FEET USUALLY STAYS quiet and still. It does not shake, rumble, or erupt skyward. Sometimes, however, especially in some regions, the Earth reveals its true nature as a restless and dynamic planet whose forces are both powerful and potentially destructive. Earthquakes can cause the ground to shake violently, roll, or rip apart. Even minor earthquakes can rattle homes and buildings. The danger increases in strong earthquakes, as does the potential damage. Bridges may collapse, roadways may be torn apart, and poorly built structures can give way. Earthquakes beneath the seafloor can also trigger dangerous and fast-moving tsunamis that pass through the open ocean without harm, but wreak disaster when they strike the shore. There is just as much danger and violence when a volcano erupts. Earthquakes may rumble through the ground while huge amounts of ash blast skyward and turn day into night as the ash rains down on nearby towns. Blocks of fiery rock or lava may spew from a volcanos crater. Some volcanic eruptions become especially dangerous as they send searing clouds of deadly gas
Buildings such as this row of townhouses were destroyed during the 1989 earthquake in San Francisco, California.
MOVING PIECES
The Earth has been changing ever since its birth more than 4 billion years ago. Scientists believe that early in our planets history, a process began that has created and shaped the surface features as we know them. Through time, this process has created our highest mountains and our deepest deep-sea trenches. It has shaped our coasts and islands and has controlled where the continents are located and where earthquakes and volcanoes are most likely to occur. It is a concept that has revolutionized earth science and provides the foundation upon which our understanding of the Earth and its powerful forces is now built. This concept is called plate tectonics. The idea for plate tectonics first appeared as early as the fifteenth century, when the artist Leonardo da Vinci pondered how the edges of the continents seemed to fit together like the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. As the centuries passed, mapmakers and
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The shapes of continents look like a large jigsaw puzzle. In the world map above, notice how the continent of South America looks like it could fit next to the continent of Africa.
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About 200 million years ago, the continents were joined together in one supercontinent. Over time, plate tectonics moved the continents into their present configuration.
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A mid-ocean ridge is where two tectonic plates move apart. As the plates move apart, magma rises through the fractures at the axis of the ridge.
magnetic variations on the seafloor. When molten rock cools, the magnetic particles, or minerals, within it become aligned with the Earths magnetic field. Throughout human history, the Earths magnetic field has pointed to the north. (Magnets or magnetized materials are aligned, or point to, the north.) When oceanographers measured the magnetism in the rocks found around a mid-ocean ridge, however, they found a strange striped pattern running parallel to the ridges centerline, or axis. Within these oddly striped patterns of magnetism was evidence that, in the past, the Earths magnetic field did not point to the north as it does today, but pointed to the south; somehow, it was the reverse of what it is today. Scientists now believe that, in fact, the Earths magnetic field has flip-flopped between north and south more than 100 times over the past 75 million years. The oceanographers who studied the seafloor were also surprised to find that there was a matching pattern, or mirror image, of magnetism on each side of the mid-ocean ridges centerline.
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The magnetism of different parts of the seafloor indicates not only the rate of new seafloor being built by magma, but also records the reversal of the Earths magnetic field over millions of years.
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This cutaway model shows the internal structure of Earth. The center of the Earth has a solid inner core surrounded by a liquid outer core. The upper and lower mantle encircle the outer core. The crust is the outermost layer.
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This causes plumes, or blobs of hot molten rock, to rise slowly through the asthenosphere toward the surface. At the base of the lithosphere, this rising molten rock is cooled, spreads out, and then sinks back into the mantle. The rising molten rock comes up under the mid-ocean ridges and the sinking material goes down beneath the deep-sea trenches. Friction between the asthenosphere and the overlying lithosphere acts like sticky tape, so that as the asthenosphere spreads out under the lithosphere, the tectonic plates are dragged along. Tectonic plates are also pulled along by slabs of oceanic crust as they are driven down (or subducted) into the mantle beneath the trenches at what are called subduction zones.
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Uneven heating and convection currents in the Earths mantle force the molten rock of the mantle upward through cracks in the seafloor at mid-ocean ridges.
Undoubtedly, the inner workings of our planet are much more complicated than described here, but as more and more research is done, our understanding of the internal workings of the Earth will improve. One thing that we now know for sure: the Earth is a dynamic, moving planet, both in its interior and on the surface. And it is at the borders of the tectonic plates that most of the action takes place.
AT THE BORDERS
Each of the Earths tectonic plates is part of the lithosphere, which is the very upper part of the mantle and the crust. A tectonic plate (continued on page 24)
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Convection
Convection is the transfer of heat through the movement of a fluid or gas. It occurs when an increase in temperature causes a liquid or gas to expand, to become less dense, and to rise within the surrounding material. An excellent example of convection occurs in a lava lamp. Heat from a light at the lamps base warms colored wax in a surrounding oil mixture. As the wax heats up, it expands, becomes less dense, and rises in funky blobs, or a flowing plume, away from the source of heat at the base. By the time the wax reaches the top of the lava lamp, it has cooled enough to become denser than the surrounding oil and begins to sink back to the bottom of the lamp. At the base of the lamp, the wax absorbs heat, which is then released into the surrounding oil as the wax rises to the top of the lamp. The transfer of heat by the movement of the wax is an illustration of convection. Convection is believed to occur within the Earths interior. Heat from deep within the Earth causes plumes, or blobs of molten rock, to rise toward the surface in the asthenosphere. Scientists now believe that in some places, plumes may also rise from as deep as the boundary between the Earths core and mantle.
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Hydrothermal Vents
In 1977, during a research cruise to study the Galapagos Rift Zone, an area of seafloor spreading off the coast of Ecuador, a team of scientists made an unexpected and startling discovery. They were investigating the possible presence of fractures in the seafloor, thousands of feet below the ocean surface, which emit warm water rich in chemicals and minerals and are known as hydrothermal vents. They found the vents all right, but then they made an even more surprising discovery. The scientists first investigated the rift zone using an underwater robot. They towed this remotely operated vehicle (ROV) from their ship, just above the seafloor at depths of more than 8,000 feet (2,438 m). The ROV was equipped with special deep-sea cameras to take underwater photographs and instruments to measure temperature. Excitement among the scientists grew when an increase in water temperature was detected at the seafloor, because this suggested they had found a possible hydrothermal vent. When the photographs taken by the ROVs cameras came back, they also showed clusters of giant clams and hundreds of mussels on the seafloor. The scientists were shocked. Most people at the time thought that life in the deep sea was scarce. The research ship Lulu, from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, next arrived on the scene carrying a deep-diving submersible named Alvin. Two scientists and a pilot squeezed aboard Alvin to investigate the possible hydrothermal vent and the strange creatures that had appeared in the photographs. As the small submersible sank deep into the sea, the driver steered it toward the area of warm water. When they reached the seafloor, the scientists aboard Alvin could hardly believe their eyes. The area was crawling with life, and many of the creatures were completely new to science. Along with large clams, they saw white crabs, a purple octopus, and lush gardens of strange, long tubeworms with white stalks that were topped by bright red, feather-like gills. They had found an ecosystem in the deep sea that no one had ever seen or even imagined.
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Scientists now estimate that there are about 280 active hydrothermal vent sites in the worlds oceans. At the few hydrothermal vents that have been explored, researchers have discovered massive buildups of minerals that look like chimneys and can be as big as buildings. Some vents have super-hot, smoky-looking fluid, rich in chemicals and minerals, billowing out of them. Since they were first discovered, about 600 new species of marine life have been found thriving on the chemicals and bacteria associated with active hydrothermal vents.
Organisms such as the tubeworms and crabs pictured here thrive in biological communities surrounding hydrothermal vents.
Divergent Boundaries
The area where two tectonic plates are moving away from one another is called a divergent boundary. The mid-ocean ridges are a divergent plate boundary. As new ocean crust is created at the axis of a mid-ocean ridge, the tectonic plates on either side slowly spread apart. For example, in the Pacific Ocean, the East Pacific Rise is considered a fast-spreading mid-ocean ridge, moving apart at a rate of about 2 to 7 inches (6 to 17 centimeters) per year. In the Atlantic Ocean, the Mid-Atlantic Ridge is considered a slow-spreading mid-ocean ridge. It moves apart at a rate of about an inch or less (1 to 3 cm) each year. The structure of a mid-ocean ridge appears to be influenced by its spreading rate. Whereas the slow-spreading Mid-Atlantic Ridge has steep, blocky sides with a depression or valley at its center, the faster spreading East Pacific Rise is flatter and broader with a peak at its middle.
Convergent Boundaries
The area where two tectonic plates collide on the Earths surface is known as a convergent boundary. When the edges of each colliding plate are made up of continental crust, these collisions result in the formation of towering mountains. These collisions are much like those where two automobiles crash head on, crumpling their front ends upward. About 50 million years ago, the
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Transform Faults
The third type of plate boundary, where two plates slide past one another in opposite directions, is called a transform fault. The large fractures that slice across the mid-ocean ridges are considered transform faults. The most famous transform fault is called the San Andreas Fault and is found in California. Here, the northwest-moving Pacific Plate meets the southeast-moving North American Plate. As the two plates jostle, stick together, and slip along this transform fault, earthquakes periodically rock the surrounding land. The science of the Earth has come a long way since people first started pondering the jigsaw puzzle-like fit of the continents. We now know that the Earths surface changes over time, and that these changes are driven by plate tectonics. The movement of the Earths tectonic plates will continue to shape and alter the surface of our planet and produce both earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.
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The What and Where of Earthquakes
EACH WEEK, ACROSS THE GLOBE, TWO TO THREE LARGE EARTHQUAKES take place. Lots of smaller earthquakes also occur. Most earthquakes are too small to feel, and many happen in areas where few people live. People typically think that in the United States, California has the most earthquakes. That dubious distinction, however, actually goes to Alaska. The Alaska Earthquake Information Center records about 22,000 earthquakes each year. While most of Alaskas quakes are small, big ones do happen. In 1964, for instance, one of the largest earthquakes ever recorded struck Alaska. This magnitude 9.2 quake struck in Prince William Sound and killed about 125 people. Anchorage and the surrounding towns suffered severe damage, with property losses estimated at more than $300 million. The great Alaskan quake also triggered a tsunami that killed people as far south as California. California does have thousands of earthquakes each year as well, just not as many as Alaska. While most of these quakes are small, California has also had its share of major and destructive events. And with more people living in California than Alaska, these quakes are potentially far more deadly. Two of the worst
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California quakes were the 6.7 magnitude Northridge quake in 1994 and the infamous 1906 San Francisco quake that registered a magnitude of 7.8. Strong earthquakes have also wreaked devastation outside of the United States. Their impact has been particularly severe in areas where buildings are not well constructed. In 2004, a massive 9.1 magnitude earthquake struck off the west coast of northern Sumatra, an island in Indonesia. The earthquake heavily
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A GLOBAL PATTERN
If we plot the locations of the worlds earthquakes over an extended period of time on a map, a striking pattern is revealed. Earthquakes are concentrated in certain areas and along lines that stretch across the globe. One arching band of earthquakes is particularly distinct, extending around the northern rim of the Pacific Ocean. This area of high earthquake and volcanic activity is called the Pacific Ring of Fire. Lots of earthquakes also appear to occur in areas of the Middle East, in southern Europe, in Indonesia, and along what we now know are the worlds midocean ridges. With todays understanding of plate tectonics, the global distribution of earthquakes makes sense: They occur mainly along the edges of the Earths tectonic plates. The real key to understanding the relationship between earthquakes and the Earths tectonic plates is the fact that most
Distinct patterns of seismic activity emerge when viewing the location of Earths volcanoes (red triangles) and earthquakes (yellow dots). Most dots and triangles are concentrated along the edges of the tectonic plates.
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The Pacific Ring of Fire is made up of areas around the Pacific Ocean basin that are prone to volcanic and earthquake activity due to the Pacific Plate colliding with other tectonic plates.
earthquakes are caused by the movement of the tectonic plates. The earthquakes that occur at the mid-ocean ridges are caused by two tectonic plates that are moving apart. Those that occur at transform faults are caused by two plates that meet and move against one another in opposite directions. Where two tectonic plates collide is where we find many of the strongest and most frequent earthquakes, as with the Pacifics infamous Ring of Fire, where the Pacific Plate collides with its neighboring plates. The Earths tectonic plates move slowly across the planets surface at about the same rate that your fingernails grow, give or take a little bit. At their boundaries, the plates bump and jostle against each other and sometimes get stuck together, or locked, by friction. Because of this sticking, the surrounding crust becomes stressed, which causes the ground to bend or deform. At some point, the strain on the rocks becomes too great and they break. Breaking usually occurs along faults, which are thought to be areas in the crust that are relatively weak. The process is
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Magnitude
When it comes to an earthquake, how big is big? Today, we use the term magnitude to describe the size of an earthquake and to compare one quake to another. When the study of earthquakes was fairly new, the only way to quantify an earthquakes size was by how much damage it caused. We now call the amount of damage done by an earthquake its intensity. This is distinctly different from measuring its size or magnitude. For example, imagine that two earthquakes of the same size hit two different regions. In one area, many old brick homes collapse when the earthquake strikes. In the other area, there are few homes and all of them are built of sturdy materials that can stand up to the shaking. Although the earthquake was the same size in both regions, the intensity of the quake was much greater in the first area because the quake caused more damage there. The intensity of an earthquake, or its amount of damage, is influenced by factors other than an earthquakes size. These factors include the number of people living in the area, the geology of the land, and the types of buildings present. So, damage is not a good way to compare events, and that is why scientists came up with a better measure of size, known as magnitude. Advances in technology helped to develop magnitude as a way to measure an earthquakes size based on the ground motion or shaking that it causes. An earthquakes magnitude does not vary from region to region or place to place. Magnitude is often based on the maximum amplitude, or size, of the peaks recorded on a seismometer during an earthquake. These peaks reflect the amount of ground motion caused by the earthquake.
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In the 1930s, a seismologist named Charles Richter wanted to create a magnitude scale that was based on whole numbers and easy to use. To accomplish this, he proposed a local magnitude scale. This became known as the Richter Scale. It is the logarithm to the base 10 of the amplitude recorded on a specific type of seismometer located 62 miles (100 km) from an earthquakes epicenter. Today, we still use this same logarithmic scale, but it is based on the use of more advanced instruments, and there are now a variety of ways of measuring or calculating magnitude. Scientists now usually refer to an earthquakes size simply as magnitude and rarely use the term on the Richter Scale. Using a logarithm scale to the base 10 means that for every whole number increase on the magnitude scale, the amplitude goes up by a factor of 10. In other words, the ground motion or shaking of a magnitude 5.0 earthquake will be 10 times the shaking of a magnitude 4.0 earthquake. However, the amount of energy released by a magnitude 5.0 earthquake as compared to magnitude 4.0 does not increase by 10, but rather by much more: in fact, 32 times more. Following an earthquake, scientists examine the data from many seismic stations and use computers to compute the magnitude as accurately as possible. One type of magnitude, the moment magnitude, is based on a measure of how much and how far the Earths crust actually shifts during a quake. Determining an earthquakes precise magnitude can take a bit of time. Typically, the magnitude of a quake will be revised several times after an event has occurred, as more data is obtained and analyzed. Earthquakes are considered strong at a magnitude 6.0, major at 7.0. A great quake is when the magnitude is 8.0 or higher.
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A seismograph is the older cousin of the seismometer, a tool used to measure the magnitude of earthquakes. In the seismograph diagram above, a weight suspended by a spring moves when vibrations are made. Attached to the weight is a pen that records the movement on a rotating drum.
molecules back and forth, in the same direction that they are traveling. If you take a long spring such as a Slinky, stretch it, and then tap one end of the spring, a wave travels down its length by moving sections to and fro. This action is similar to the compressional motion of a P-wave. P-waves can pass through both solids and liquids, and their speed increases as the density of the material they are passing through increases. Secondary waves, or S-waves, do not travel as quickly as P-waves. They are also called shear waves. They travel through the ground by deforming it or shifting the molecules from side to side. S-waves can pass through solids, but because true liquids cannot be deformed, they cannot pass through liquids.
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Earthquakes occur along a fault. The area where an earthquake originates is called the hypocenter, or focus. Directly above the focus on Earths surface is the epicenter. Seismic waves radiate from the focus.
Scientists across the globe have established specific stations to detect seismic waves. The seismometers used at seismic stations are now very sensitive and can detect different types of seismic waves, as well as earthquakes that are too small for a person to feel. They can also record the weak ground motion of a large, very distant earthquake or an explosion. An earthquake of magnitude 6.0 or higher can be detected by seismometers anywhere in the world. Some instruments are so sensitive they can pick up the nearby movement of trains, trucks, high surf, and even strong winds. Scientists need to know the arrival times of P- and S-waves from at least three seismic stations to precisely locate an earthquakes epicenter. If they have data from a fourth seismic station, then the quakes depth within the Earthits hypocenter, or focuscan also be determined.
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Earthquake Science
SCIENTISTS WHO STUDY EARTHQUAKES ARE CALLED SEISMOLOGISTS. Seismologists investigate a wide variety of interesting topics related to earthquakes, such as how a fault ruptures during a quake or how the geology of the land affects the amount of shaking that occurs. Seismologists also study the pattern of aftershocks following an earthquake. They may assess what the probability of an earthquake is in a specific region or what the dangers are when one strikes. Seismologists also work closely with engineers and geologists to build roads, bridges, and buildings that will be safe during an earthquake. And, of course, there are scientists who are striving to find a way to predict earthquakes and to give people an early warning before they happen.
FAULTS
To better understand where and why earthquakes happen in a specific region, scientists often try to identify and map all of the faults present. As previously noted, faults are thought to be places in the Earths crust that are relatively weak. These areas tend to break first when under enough strain. Faults can appear as large
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The twisted curve of this train track in Guatemala indicates an offset in the landscape caused by the Motagua Fault.
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cracks or fractures in the ground, offsets in the landscape, or they may lie underground, hidden from view. Some faults extend for hundreds of miles, while others cover a much shorter distance. Faults can also branch out into a series or system of faults. Once a fault is discovered, seismologists want to know how much strain it is under. They may discover that the tectonic plates associated with the fault are creeping slowly but steadily. On the other hand, the tectonic plates may be stuck, locked in place by friction. If a fault is locked and strain is building up, then scientists want to know when that fault might rupture and cause an earthquake. They also want to know how much ground motion would be caused if an earthquake were to occur. If there is a history of earthquakes that have taken place on a specific fault in the region, information from past events can help to understand what future earthquakes may be like. There are essentially three types of faults. A strike-slip fault is another means of describing a transform fault, where two tectonic plates are moving or slipping horizontally past each other in opposite directions. These faults are called strike-slip because the direction of the slip is parallel to the direction of the fault, or strike, across the landscape. The second and third types, normal and thrust faults, both involve vertical motion. In places where the Earths crust on either side of a fault is being pulled apart, such as at a mid-ocean ridge, one side of the fault may slide downward relative to the other. This is called a normal fault. A thrust fault is where the crust is being compressed with one side being forced up over the other. Thrust faults occur most commonly where tectonic plates are converging, such as in a subduction zone. Blind thrust faults are thrust faults hidden beneath the surface. To study faults and how the Earths crust moves before or during an earthquake, scientists today use a wide variety of hightech tools, including global positioning system (GPS) receivers, seismometers, and satellite imagery. To determine how much of a fault ruptures or tears during an earthquake, scientists look at where aftershocks occur.
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In a strike-slip fault, the movement of the plates is parallel to the fault (a). In a normal fault, one plate slides lower than the other plate (b). In a thrust fault, one plate is pushed up and over the other plate (c).
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AfteRsHocKs
Rarely does an earthquake happen singly, all by itself. While scientists define the largest earthquake in a series of quakes as the mainshock, smaller quakes that come before the mainshock are called foreshocks and those that happen afterwards are called aftershocks. Some earthquakes have foreshocks, while others do not. In the 1994 Northridge earthquake in California, the 6.7 magnitude mainshock was the largest quake, but there were no foreshocks. There were, however, thousands of aftershocks that began immediately after the mainshock and continued for about five years. Many of these aftershocks happened within the first month following the quake. Typically, aftershocks become less frequent with time. It is possible, however, to have a large and damaging aftershock several months after a major quake, but usually they come sooner rather than later. People always want to know how long the aftershocks will last. Unfortunately, there is really no sure way of telling. Scientists often can make a pretty good guess about when the aftershocks might end, however, based on the history of earthquakes within a given region. The epicenters of the aftershocks that occur soon after an earthquake usually form a cluster or concentrate around an area of activity. Most of the time, this area outlines where a fault has ruptured during the main earthquake. A fault can rupture at one place and continue tearing in one direction, or it can break in two opposite directions. Some seismologists believe that an earthquake on one fault can also trigger breaks or earthquakes on other faults. The length and speed of a fault rupture influence the size of an earthquake and the damage it causes. Aftershocks are essentially the ground adjusting to changes in the strain in the Earths crust after an earthquake. Think about what happens when a piece of paper is crumpled into a ball and then set aside. The ball of paper crackles and uncrumples a bit, enlarging slightly in size, until it reaches a stable configuration. After an earthquake, the aftershocks are like the crackling and
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Cool Tools
From incredibly sensitive seismometers to earth-orbiting satellites and high-tech computer models, seismologists today have some very cool tools at their fingertips. Compared to the past, the instruments used today to detect and record earthquakes are much more precise and able to record much smaller earthquakes. Scientists can now use the GPS to accurately monitor and track the slow motion of the Earths tectonic plates or detect ground deformation caused by strain. Scientists can also use radar images from satellites to compare pictures of the same location from two different dates and precisely calculate changes in the land surface. This can help scientists to locate faults or the movement of the Earths crust associated with them. Seismologists are also borrowing technology developed from the oil industry to help drill holes deep into the Earth to investigate faults, such as the San Andreas in California. Not only can they drill deep down, they can also drill horizontally at depth to take samples or install instruments. The advances in computer technology have also proven to be of great benefit for seismologists. With sophisticated computer models, they now can simulate earthquakes, fault movement, and ground shaking. By combining the information gained from a network of seismometers with computer modeling and graphics, seismologists now can create 3-D visualizations of the Earths interior, of faults, and of earthquakes. This is called earthquake tomography and is something like the 3-D visualizations of the body done with CT scans, only in this case, scientists use seismic waves to create an image of the inside of the Earth. The science of earthquakes is advancing as the tools for research get better and better.
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same fault or on nearby faults. Scientists often study sections adjacent to recently ruptured faults to look for areas that are at risk of breaking in the future and that could cause the next big earthquake.
Seismic CYcLe
As the Earths tectonic plates shift and move over the planets surface, there is an ongoing cycle of strain and release. Movement by the plates and friction at their edges causes strain to build up. When the strain becomes too much, the crust ruptures along weak points or faults. An earthquake occurs and the strain is released. The cycle then begins again as the tectonic plates continue to move and get stuck, and strain builds up again. Compared to the lifetime of a person, this seismic cycle happens over a much longer time period. In China and Japan, the written records of earthquakes go back thousands of years. In California, earthquake records go back only about 250 years. In terms of the history of the Earth and the movement of tectonic plates, these are very short time periods. We would understand more about the seismic cycle and earthquakes if we had records that extended further back in the Earths history. Scientists have discovered clever ways to learn about ancient earthquakes, those events where there are no written records or eyewitness accounts. Trees, sediment, and old stream or lakebeds that lie along a fault can sometimes provide clues about quakes that occurred a long time ago. Scientists studying the disruption of layered sediments within a lakebed along the San Andreas Fault near Palmdale, California, identified evidence of a dozen or so prehistoric earthquakes. Information on past quakes can help seismologists to understand how often big earthquakes tend to strike within a specific area. Seismologists have long wondered if there are regular intervals or periods of time between earthquakes on specific faults. If the Earths tectonic plates move at a relatively steady rate, and each fault is assumed to break at a certain level of strain, then one might be able to predict when a rupture or earthquake should occur. Unfortunately, it is not that simple. In the United States,
PARKfieLD, CALifoRniA
The town of Parkfield is located in central California on the San Andreas Fault. Scientists have been studying earthquakes in Parkfield since the 1970s. In 1984, their research had suggested that moderate-sized earthquakes occurred in the region about every 18 to 26 years. Based on this information, seismologists predicted that another earthquake would strike the Parkfield area around 1988, give or take about 4 years. Over the next several years, the area was equipped with all sorts of instruments to monitor and record the earthquake that many thought was coming. The major earthquake that was predicted has yet to happen. Still, Parkfield continues to be the focus of intense research on earthquakes. There is currently an ongoing and ambitious effort to create a San Andreas Fault Observatory in the area. As part of the project, in 2004, the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) began drilling a hole into the fault to install instruments 1 to 2 miles (2 to 3 km) below the Earths surface in a location near where magnitude 6.0 earthquakes have previously occurred. Studies done at the San Andreas Fault Observatory are revealing new information about the geologic structure of the San Andreas Fault. Seismologists are learning about how sections of the fault creep and about the role of very small earthquakes, which are called microearthquakes. They are also determining how much strain is building up on different parts of the San Andreas Fault in Parkfield and producing new computer-derived images of the fault. If a moderate to large earthquake does occur in the region, as is expected, it will probably be the best monitored and studied earthquake ever.
PReDicting EARtHQuAKes
California has dozens of faults, some of them big, some of them small. Each earthquake that occurs in California relieves strain
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on some faults while possibly increasing strain on others. The result is that, even in an area so well studied, predicting where and when earthquakes are going to happen is a complicated and uncertain task. Seismologists cannot yet predict exactly where and when the next earthquake in California will take place or how big it will be. Based on the history of earthquakes in the region, however, and with our improved understanding of the processes involved, seismologists can forecast the possibility of an earthquake happening over a given length of time. For example, the chances of a magnitude 7.5 or larger earthquake (called the Big One) occurring on the San Andreas Fault during the next 30 years is at least 5050. In other words, there is just as good a chance that it will happen as that it will not. For an individual living in, or moving to, an area near the San Andreas Fault, this does not seem very helpful. For an engineer who plans to design a bridge, a road, a home, a large building, or anything that is expected to last at least 30 years, however, this is important information. An engineer must take into account the possibility of the strong shaking that can accompany an earthquake. Will seismologists ever be able to predict earthquakes with more accuracy and provide people with more timely warnings? Unfortunately, the answer seems to be no, at least not anytime soon. One of the problems with predicting earthquakes is that there is still a lot we do not fully understand or know about what goes on in the Earths interior. It certainly does not help that we cannot see directly down inside the Earth and witness what is happening day to day or view what happens when an earthquake strikes. Most of our measurements are made at or near the surface, and we have to guess what is going on below from the study of these surface measurements. Some seismologists think that earthquakes will never be predictable. In short, they are naturally unpredictable. Throughout history, as people have searched for a way to predict or forecast earthquakes, they have looked for early warning signs. Foreshocks could be an early warning sign of a larger earthquake to come, but some earthquakes do not have foreshocks. And some small earthquakes are just small earthquakes,
Seismic HAZARDs
Although we cannot yet reliably predict earthquakes, there are ways that we can help to save both lives and property. Within a given region, this often begins with identifying where the dangers
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are. Scientists often start by mapping the faults within a region and then assessing the size of the earthquakes that could occur. A wide variety of techniques can now be used to locate faults. In the 1990s, when scientists were mapping the faults near Portland, Oregon, they used a specially designed airplane equipped with instruments to measure the Earths magnetic field. In their search for distinct patterns in the magnetic field that can indicate the presence of faults or breaks in the Earths crust, they discovered a previously unknown fault that runs directly under the city of Portland. Once the faults within a region have been identified, they are plotted on a seismic hazard map, which helps to identify where earthquakes are most likely to occur. Scientists are also producing maps of the ground shaking that occurs or is expected to occur during an earthquake. Ground shaking is influenced by a number of factors, including the size of the earthquake, the distance from the epicenter, and the underlying rock and soil types. After an earthquake, the USGS can now quickly produce maps that show the pattern of ground shaking. These maps can help emergency responders decide where to go and where the greatest damage may be. They can also provide the public with helpful information for planning and preparation efforts and aid in the design of highways, bridges, and buildings. They can also assist in estimating the possibility of landslides in earthquakes. Ground motion information is particularly important for areas like the city of Seattle, Washington, that sit on a basin of sedimentary rock. Soft sediments, especially loose landfill, can greatly increase how much the ground shakes during an earthquake. And strong shaking can turn water-rich sand into quicksand. In the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake in California, San Franciscos Marina District was devastated even though it was 62 miles (100 km) away from the epicenter. The Marina District was an upscale, trendy neighborhood, but it had been built on unstable sediments and landfill. Much of the underlying fill was actually rubble from the famous 1906 San Francisco quake. During the Loma Prieta quake, shaking caused the soft landfill within the Marina District
ReDucing RisK
Across the globe, scientists are working to help reduce the risks that earthquakes pose to people. They cannot stop earthquakes from happening, but they can help people build safer homes and become better prepared. There are now specialists in California who help homeowners quake-proof their property and reduce the dangers inside, such as heavy objects that could fall during an earthquake. On a larger scale, engineers work to improve the safety of home construction, especially in areas at high risk of earthquakes. In the United States, many homes have wood frames, which are lightweight and strong. When attached to their foundations, these wood-frame houses survive well in an earthquake. Older homes that are not bolted to their foundations do not fare as well. Buildings that have little reinforcement and are made of brick or other masonry often sustain the worst damage in earthquakes. In many other parts of the world, homes are traditionally built of stone or adobe, which crumble easily during quakes. In these areas, quakes of any magnitude can become tragic disasters due to the collapse or destruction of buildings, homes, and even schools, such as the tragic school collapses in the Sichuan province of China during the 7.9 magnitude earthquake that struck in May 2008. Earthquakes have long been of great concern in Japan. Like other places in the world, Japanese scientists have yet to come up with a way to reliably predict earthquakes. They have, however,
Earthquake Science
developed an experimental early warning system to provide an alert seconds before a quake strikes. The system is designed to detect the arrival of the fastest seismic waves, the P-waves. P-waves
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Earthquake Safety
Earthquake safety begins with education and preparation. It is especially important to be prepared if you live in places such as Alaska or California, where earthquakes are more common. Earthquakes can happen in many areas, however, and even if you do not live in a region that is at high risk, you may one day be visiting an area when an earthquake strikes. Here are just a few tips to help. The Web sites listed at the back of the book provide more information. During an earthquake: If you are indoors, drop down to the floor and take cover under something sturdy, like a desk or table. Be sure to stay away from windows, fireplaces, or objects that could fall from shelves or cabinets. If you are outdoors, go to an open space away from buildings and power lines. If you are driving in a car, stay inside, but stop and be sure you are away from bridges, overpasses, and tunnels. Try to stay away from traffic as well as trees, light posts, and signs that could fall. If you are near a cliff or rocky area, stay clear of where rocks could fall or slopes could give way. If you are on a beach, move quickly, but calmly, inland and to higher ground. Stay calm and listen to instructions from your parents, teachers, or emergency responders. If you or your family need help, call your local police or fire department, or dial 911.
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4
Undersea Earthquakes and Tsunamis
IN LATE DECEMBER 2004, A MASSIVE EARTHQUAKE OFF THE ISLAND of Sumatra triggered a tsunami that killed hundreds of thousands of people. In the aftermath of this horrible disaster, people across the globe became much more aware of tsunamis and the dangers they pose. Tsunamis have been happening on planet Earth throughout its restless history. They are less common than earthquakes or volcanic eruptions, but they are potentially just as powerful and just as destructive. Tsunamis are seismic sea waves. Sometimes they are called tidal waves, but they have little to do with the tides, so it is more accurate to call them tsunamis, which comes from the Japanese words tsu, meaning harbor, and nami, meaning wave. Tsunamis can be one or a series of waves generated by the sudden movement, or disturbance, of the seafloor. Earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, landslides, or asteroid impacts can trigger a tsunami. During the last decade or so, researchers have discovered that many tsunamis are generated when earthquakes cause underwater landslides. The largest tsunami ever recorded occurred in Lituya Bay, Alaska, in 1958 when an 8.0 magnitude earthquake
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Survivors walk through the devastated city of Banda Aceh in Indonesia five days after the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami.
struck 13 miles (21 km) away and triggered a huge landslide into the bay. This landslide created waves estimated to have reached an incredible 1,500 feet (450 m) in height. Strong, shallow earthquakes under the seafloor are the most likely triggers of a tsunami. In fact, if an earthquake registering 7.0 magnitude or greater happens near the coast anywhere in the world, scientists automatically go on the alert for a tsunami, especially if it takes place near subduction zones where the faults involved tend to create vertical movement of the seafloor during
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(continued) comparing images from December 26, 2004, to images taken days or weeks before. An international team of scientists was deployed after the tsunami struck. In Sri Lanka, they found that water from the tsunami flooded more than one-half mile (1 km) inland. Based on eyewitness accounts and evidence at the scene, the tsunami was 9 to 30 feet (3 to 10 m) high when it reached the shore in Sri Lanka. Today, scientists and their partners within the international community are trying to better prepare the people who live along the shores of the Indian Ocean for tsunamis. One way is through the establishment of an effective warning system. Scientists also are trying to educate people about how to build safer structures, what the warning signs of a tsunami are, and how to prepare and respond. More investment in education, preparation, and emergency communications is needed if we are to prevent catastrophes of this size from happening again when the next monster tsunami comes to call.
an earthquake. Not all large quakes that take place under the seabed, in a subduction zone, or along the coast produce tsunamis. In general, the amount of vertical movement caused by an earthquake is thought to determine why some quakes trigger tsunamis while others do not. In addition to an earthquakes size, the depth at which it occurs is also important in determining if it will trigger a tsunami. The deeper the earthquake, the less energy that reaches the surface, so there tends to be less vertical movement of the seafloor. Earthquakes that occur deeper than about 19 miles (30 km) rarely trigger a tsunami. Truly great quakes, however, such as the 9.5 magnitude quake that struck in Chile in 1960, can occasionally produce tsunamis even at great depths. An earthquake whose epicenter is on land can trigger a tsunami only if
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The characteristics of a wave include: wavelength, or the horizontal distance from the top of one wave crest (or peak) to another; height, or the vertical distance from the trough, or valley, to the top of the crest; and amplitude, or the vertical distance from the waves midline to the top of a crest.
AT THE SHORE
Tsunamis are most often generated in relatively deep water. They then travel through the open ocean into shallow water and strike the shore. If tsunamis are triggered relatively close to shore, they can strike within minutes, with little warning. Tsunamis that are generated far from the coast can take hours to reach the shoreline. In the open ocean, the long, low waves of a tsunami travel as fast as a jet airplane, at speeds more than 400 miles per hour (700 kilometers per hour). Their speed is strongly dependent on the depth of the water. When a tsunami enters shallow water, it begins to feel the bottom, or slow down. In depths of about 100 feet (30 m), a tsunami slows down to about 37 miles per hour (60 km/hr). It is important to note that even though a tsunami slows down at the shore, it still moves faster than a person can run.
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As a tsunami reaches shore, its wavelength shortens and its height grows taller, resulting in enormous waves or powerful surges when it makes landfall.
TsunAmi Science
Tsunamis are difficult to study because they happen infrequently, occur suddenly, and are unpredictable. When a tsunami does strike, scientists try to learn as much about it as possible. In the aftermath of a tsunami, an international team of tsunami experts is often sent. These scientists interview eyewitnesses and look for clues about the height of the wave when it reached land and how far inland it flowed. The tsunami may have left behind a flood line on buildings that marks how high the water rose. Scattered piles of debris may also show how high the water rose or how far inland it flooded. In some cases, the destruction of homes and vegetation provides important clues as to how big and strong the tsunami was when it struck the shore. Scientists also examine the shape of the coastline, the water depth, and the habitats along the shore. All of these factors can affect how a tsunami impacts the coast. In recent years, scientists have discovered that the presence of healthy mangrove forests and coral reefs along the coast can help to buffer the impacts of a tsunami. Scientists also take ships out to sea to investigate the movement of the seafloor they suspect triggered the tsunami, or to find out if a landslide was involved. The information they collect can help to better understand and model tsunamis and to help prepare and protect people for future events.
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Volcanoes Across the Globe
THERE ARE MORE THAN 1,500 VOLCANOES ON LAND ACROSS THE world. Each year only about 50 of these are active, while most lie dormant, asleep for now. Many of the Earths volcanoes lie undersea. While some volcanic eruptions are dangerous and violent events that threaten nearby communities, others pose less peril and provide spectacular displays that remind us of the Earths restless nature. Today, more and more people around the world live within the shadow of a volcano, drawn by their steep, scenic slopes and fertile soils. The result is that millions of people are living at risk. For some, the dangers are not so great because the nearby volcanoes are well monitored and preparations are in place in case of an eruption. For many others, however, the volcanoes in whose shadows they live go unwatched and so the inhabitants go unprepared. Today, we know a lot more about volcanoes than in the past, and we have better technology to watch and to study them. Much of our improved knowledge has come with our growing understanding of plate tectonics, which controls or influences where most, if not all, volcanoes occur.
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79, Vesuvius, Italy. Eyewitness accounts of this volcanic eruption tell of an enormous and violent blast that destroyed the surrounding land and killed thousands of people. The eruption of Vesuvius in 79 A.D. began with a blast of gas and ash that produced a huge, pine-treeshaped cloud rising skyward. For 11 long hours, ash and rocky debris were ejected high into the atmosphere. In the nearby town of Pompeii, day turned to night as the sky darkened, and ash and rocks rained down. The following night, the towering cloud over the volcano suddenly (continued)
Hundreds of years after the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in 79 A.D., archeologists discovered gaps in the ash that proved to be impressions of decomposed bodies. The plaster and resin castings of these impressions provide an eerily accurate picture of the last moments of hundreds of Pompeii citizens.
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(continued) collapsed, and deadly flows of burning gas and ash surged off the volcanos summit. The town of Herculaneum and, later, Pompeii were destroyed by the searing flows. Residents were instantly incinerated or buried under about 10 feet (3 m) of burning volcanic debris. Vesuvius is located behind a subduction zone. 1815, Tambora, Indonesia. This was the worlds largest ash eruption ever recorded. During the eruption, huge amounts of material were ejected into and transported throughout the atmosphere. So much ash was in the air that the year following the eruption was called the Year Without a Summer because of how it blocked out sunlight and reduced global temperatures. Superheated flows of gas and burning debris also plunged off the volcano during the eruption, and thousands of people were killed. The volcano lies about 180 miles (300 km) behind the Sunda Trench and its underlying subduction zone. 1980, Mount St. Helens, United States. After 123 years of sleep, Mount St. Helens awoke with a vengeance in 1980. It began with swarms of earthquakes indicating that magma was stirring below the surface. The earthquake activity increased, small avalanches of snow and ice cas-
MID-OCEAN RIDGES
Deep beneath the sea at mid-ocean ridges, where the Earths tectonic plates are spreading apart, there are undersea volcanoes. Human eyes, however, rarely see them erupt. Even scientists who use submersibles and remotely operated vehicles to study mid-ocean ridges hardly ever see or record actual volcanic eruptions. More often, they find evidence of a recent eruption, such as very fresh,
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caded off the volcanos peak and slopes, and then an eruption of steam and ash blasted skyward. And that was just the beginning. Eventually, a bulge grew on the mountains northern flank and thousands of earthquakes occurred below the swelling rock. On the morning of Sunday, May 18, 1980, a 5.5 magnitude earthquake rocked the summit. The mountains rocky bulge suddenly collapsed and a series of powerful eruptions were unleashed, killing 57 people, including volcanologist David Johnston, who was monitoring the volcano. Eyewitnesses reported that the whole northern half of the volcano seemed to disappear in an instant. A huge explosion ripped through the summit and an enormous avalanche of volcanic debris cascaded off the volcanos slopes, moving at speeds estimated at more than 100 miles per hour. Soon, blasts of ash, rock, and searing gas surged even faster off the mountain. Day became night for residents in nearby towns as ash blackened the sky and rained down. Burning flows of gas and ash scoured the mountainside, while melting snow and ice created huge volcanic mudflows. Afterward, the surrounding lands were scoured and burned while rivers and valleys were piled high with volcanic debris. Mount St. Helens is part of the Cascade Mountain Range, lying to the east of and associated with the Cascadian Subduction Zone.
warm fields of cooling volcanic rock on the seafloor. Upon their return to a research site on a mid-ocean ridge, one scientific expedition found their instruments encased in freshly erupted rock. Hot molten rock beneath the Earths surface is called magma. If it erupts underwater or on land, it is called lava. Magma is generally a mixture of melted or crystallized minerals and dissolved gases. In the deep sea, the ocean is cold and the pressure
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Pillow basalt forms deep under the ocean where the extremely cold temperatures cause the lava to cool very quickly.
is extremely high due to the weight of the overlying water. When fiery hot lava erupts in the deep sea, it immediately comes into contact with this cold seawater at high pressure. This keeps volcanic eruptions in the deep ocean from being explosive. Lava cools so fast in the deep sea that there is no time for crystals to grow. The rocks that form are smooth, rounded, and glassy. These are called pillow lavas or pillow basalts. Basalt is a rock that contains up to 50% silica and oxygen along with iron, calcium, and magnesium. The relatively high iron content gives it a dark-gray to black color. A pillow basalt looks something like a huge wad of black toothpaste that has been squeezed from a tube and then hardened and cracked. At a mid-ocean ridge, there are many cracks in the rocks and underlying seafloor. Seawater can flow down through these cracks and come into contact with hot magma below. When this
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The islands of Hawaii are home to many active and potentially active volcanoes, resulting from the movement of the Pacific Plate over a hotspot.
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Mount Kilauea on the island of Hawaii has been erupting regularly for decades. Volcano-watching has become a major tourist attraction for the island.
or unmoving. They are located at specific places where plumes, or blobs of magma, continually rise through the mantle to the Earths surface to create volcanoes. Because the planets tectonic plates are continually moving, they are like conveyor belts that pass over these stationary hot spots. As the plate passes over the hot spot, a volcano forms. As the plate continues to move, more volcanoes are created to form a chain of volcanoes. The Hawaiian Islands are the most well-known example of hot spot volcanoes, formed due to the movement of the Pacific Plate over an underlying hot spot. The Big Island of Hawaii, still
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When tectonic plates move apart, a rift valley forms. The Great African Rift Valley, seen here in Kenya, stretches down the length of East Africa and will someday in the future form the beginnings of a new ocean.
of Africa as a continent is ancient and relatively stable. Now, however, its eastern half is breaking apart. A new area of plate divergence has begun and the African Plate, which includes the entire continent of Africa and surrounding oceanic crust, is literally being ripped in two along the area known as the Great African Rift Valley. The spreading of the plates and the eruption of magma in the Rift Valley has created a series of active volcanoes in the region. Scientists do not know why, or how, new divergent boundaries such as this begin, but we are seeing it happen before our eyes. And millions of years from now, if the rift continues to spread apart, in the middle will be a new ocean with a new mid-ocean ridge.
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Volcano Science
SCIENTISTS WHO STUDY VOLCANOES ARE CALLED VOLCANOLOGISTS. While it is their goal to understand volcanoes in general, these scientists often focus their efforts on identifying the signs of an impending eruption and determining how a volcano is likely to erupt. They also monitor volcanoes across the world for potential activity and work to assist communities that may be at risk.
UNCORKING A VOLCANO
When a bottle of champagne is uncorked, bubbles rush to the surface and explode out the top. In a simplified way, this is similar to what happens when some volcanoes erupt. Before it is opened, a bottle of champagne is full of energy in the form of dissolved gas just waiting to escape. With the bottle tightly sealed by an oversized cork, which is wrapped tightly by a wire cage, high pressure inside keeps the gas dissolved within the liquid champagne. There are few, if any, bubbles visible. When the cork is popped, the pressure inside the champagne bottle instantly decreases. Once that happens, the gas inside comes out of its dissolved state and forms bubbles. The bubbles form incredibly quickly and rise to the
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Volcano Science
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The internal structure of a volcano shows how magma may move toward the surface.
TYpes of VoLcAnoes
In some ways, each of the Earths volcanoes is like an individual person with its own style and personality. No two volcanoes look exactly alike, nor do they erupt in exactly the same way or at the same time. Yet, volcanologists have identified specific character-
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istics that are common among certain types of volcanoes. These common traits are defined by plate tectonics, the style and type of eruptions that occur, as well as the shape of the volcano. This
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SHIELD VOLCANOES
When most people think of volcanoes, they think of the lavaspewing, blackened domes of Hawaii. Hawaiis mountains of fire are called shield volcanoes because their broad, gently sloping shapes look a bit like a warriors shield. Shield volcanoes form as successive flows of hardened lava build up over time, creating
The massive Mauna Loa shield volcano rises behind the Mauna Kea volcano (foreground) in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, Hawaii.
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a wide, domed structure. Lava flows at this type of volcano are typically very fluid, and they spread out over long distances. As these rivers of fiery lava flow down the volcanos sides, they cool and form gently sloping sheets of crusty black basalt. Eruptions at shield volcanoes are rarely explosive. The frequent and easily flowing lava allows gas to escape so it does not build up beneath the volcano. At the summit of many shield volcanoes is a large circular depression called a caldera. Calderas usually form when lava is emptied from an underlying chamber and the overlying rock collapses. Smaller features that are produced by the collapse of rock or explosive eruptions are called craters. Sometimes, lava also erupts from fractures, rifts, or fissures along a volcanos slopes. In Hawaii, lava and the rocks it creates are generally described as either aa (pronounced ah ah) or pahoehoe (pronounced pah hoi hoi) flows. Aa lava is thick, relatively slow moving, and cools to create rough, fragmented, rocky flows. Shoes with tough, thick soles are needed to walk over the sharp, rough terrain of an aa flow. Pahoehoe flows are thinner, more fluid, and form smooth, ropy rocks. In a cooled pahoehoe flow, the streams, swirls, and blobs of the once fluid lava appear to have been frozen in place. One of the most spectacular sights in Hawaii is when hot lava meets the cold sea. As fiery lava falls into the ocean, it cools extremely quickly and geysers of steam gush skyward. The cooling happens so quickly that the hardening rock may shatter into small pieces of black glass upon contact with the water. As a result, nearby beaches are often lined with shiny black sand. The process is similar to what happens when cold water is poured into a hot coffeepot made of glass. The coffeepot almost always cracks.
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There are two main kinds of lava in Hawaii: The chunky, jagged lava in the background is called aa, while the thick, ribbon-like lava in the foreground is called pahoehoe.
tions that can include both lava flows and more explosive events, which pile up pyroclastic debris. Pyroclastic, or pyroclasts, refers to rocky fragments that are blasted out of a volcano in an explosive eruption. They can be as small as tiny ash particles or as large as huge blocks. In especially dangerous and explosive volcanic eruptions, pyroclastic debris can mix with hot gases to create a fast, burning flow that speeds down a volcanos side. These are sometimes referred to as a nue ardente, French for glowing
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cloud, or simply a pyroclastic flow. A stratovolcano eruption can be one of the most deadly types of explosions on Earth. Some of the worlds most majestic and dangerous mountains are stratovolcanoes, including Mount St. Helens and Mount Rainier in the state of Washington, Oregons Mount Hood, Japans Mount Fuji, Italys Mount Vesuvius, and Indonesias Krakatau. Eruptions from stratovolcanoes typically begin with an explosive blast of gas, ash, and rocky debris. Ash clouds may rise high up into the atmosphere. After the gas and gas-rich magma has been ejected, thick, viscous lava may gush out of the volcanos crater. Over time, and with repeated eruptions, layers of debris and cooled lava build up to create a cone-shaped mountain. Magma usually flows through a channel or tunnel beneath the volcano and erupts through a central vent into a crater at the summit or from cracks lining the mountains sides. The hardened lava that fills these cracks or fissures can help to support and strengthen the volcanos sides. If the volcanos central vent gets plugged, a secondary vent may open and create a smaller volcanic cone nearby. Volcanoes that lie above subduction zones are of the strato, or composite, type. The lava flowing from their craters or fissures tends to be thicker and less fluid than the flows of a shield volcano, as in Hawaii. In eruptions, light-colored rocks that are riddled with holes and bubbles may be ejected skyward. This type of volcanic rock is called pumice and can contain enough trapped gas inside for it to float in water. An extremely thick lava flow, or an underlying buildup of gas or magma, may create a bulge, or dome, on a composite volcano. Before the powerful eruption of Mount St. Helens in 1980, the bulge on its northern side grew about 450 feet (137 m) high and 85 feet (30 m) wide. The collapse of the lava dome on Mount St. Helens is believed to have been what triggered the devastating blasts and pyroclastic flows that followed. Volcanoes that have not erupted for a long time are called dormant and may lay quiet for centuries or more. Over time, weathering can erode a dormant volcanos summit, making
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In May 1980, Mount St. Helens erupted, covering much of the Pacific Northwestern United States in varying levels of ash.
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it look less like a sleeping volcano and more like a harmless mountain. Residents who live nearby may not even realize it is a volcano. This can be especially dangerous should the mountain actually turn out to be a potentially explosive stratovolcano.
Cinder Cones
In the early 1940s, a farmer in Mexico found a mysterious hole in one of his fields and decided to use it as a convenient rubbish dump. In late February 1943, however, his field began to shake and rumble. A large crack appeared across the bottom of the strange hole. Much to the farmers surprise, the hole then began to belch fire and ash. Within days, a cinder cone more than 30 feet (9 m) tall had formed around the hole on his field. It continued to erupt and just one year later his flat, quiet field of corn had become a cinder cone more than 1,100 feet (410 m) high, now named Parcutin. A cinder cone is built of cinders ejected from a volcanic vent or crack. It is probably the most common and simple type of volcanic structure. The creation of a cinder cone occurs as gas within the erupting magma causes lava to be blown violently into the air, where it breaks up into large particles of ash or cinders. As the cinders cool, they solidify and fall to the ground, thereby accumulating as a circular volcanic cone around the erupting vent. Cinder cones can be created through unexpected eruptions along volcanic cracks, as the farmer in Mexico discovered, though they most commonly occur at fractures or vents on the sides of a volcano. On the flanks of the Hawaiian volcano Mauna Kea, geologists have documented nearly 100 cinder cones.
Flood Basalts
Throughout the Earths restless history, there have been extensive eruptions of highly fluid, basaltic lava from long fissures in the planets crust. These create large, flat plains of cooled volcanic rock called flood basalts. Ancient flood basalts form broad, low-lying plateaus in Iceland and near the Columbia River in Washington and Oregon.
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The different kinds of volcanoes are classified based on their shape and styles of eruption.
Volcanic Lakes
Some of the worlds volcanoes have a lake at their summit, located within the crater, or caldera. Gases, such as carbon dioxide, may enter from the underlying volcano and accumulate within the lake, especially at its bottom. This can create a special, though
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relatively rare, danger. If a gas-rich volcanic lake is disrupted, it may release its toxic fumes over the nearby lands. This happened in 1986 in Lake Nyos in Cameroon, Africa. The sudden release of toxic gas from the lake caused the deaths of 1,700 people. Volcanic lakes can also be the source of massive mudflows and flooding during eruptions.
ReADY to BLow?
One of the main goals of a volcanologist is to determine if, how, and when a volcano will erupt. The probability of a volcanic eruption is usually calculated based on changes in the volcanos current level of activity. Scientists note these changes by creating, in a sense, a daily diary for the volcano. In this diary, they note repeated measurements of gas emissions at the summit and near fissures. They monitor earthquake activity and the shape of the volcanos summit or slopes. With relatively long-term monitoring, scientists can determine what is the baseline, or normal, activity for the volcano. Changes from this baseline state might mean that magma or gases are moving beneath the volcano, which could indicate that it is becoming more active. Volcanoes may exhibit signs of unrest months to years before an eruption occurs. This type of monitoring, however, is very expensive and labor intensive and takes equipment and trained, experienced personnel. In many regions of the world, particularly in poorer nations, such volcano monitoring may be impossible or simply be seen as a lower priority when compared to problems such as hunger, water pollution, and disease. Many volcanologists today focus their efforts on studying and carefully monitoring specific volcanoes to better understand volcanoes in general and to learn what the warning signs of an eruption are in a specific region. Volcano observatories are set up on specific sites to closely monitor and observe volcanoes, especially those that lie near populated regions. While there are many potentially dangerous volcanoes in the world, only a relatively few of them are regularly monitored or studied in depth. Some of the new tools being used to study volcanoes, such as relatively
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Cool Tools
Scientists now have a host of high-tech tools to help them poke, prod, and investigate Earths volcanoes. Modern seismometers used to detect earthquakes are also helpful in the study of volcanoes. Prior to and during an eruption, earthquakes may be triggered as magma or gas moves through the underlying rocks or breaks its way to the surface. Earthquakes can signal that a volcano is reawakening months, weeks, days, or hours in advance of an eruption. Some of these earthquakes happen in swarms of numerous small but unusually long and rhythmic quakes. This is called volcanic tremor and is caused by the movement of fluid or gas through cracks beneath the surface. With information from a series of seismometers, volcanologists can also use computers to create a 2- or 3-D image of a volcanos interior. Volcanologists often outfit a volcano with sensitive instruments to monitor the changing shape of a volcanos summit and slopes. A bulging or growth of a dome on a volcano can be precisely measured with GPS (Global Positioning System) receivers, tiltmeters, and laser technology. (A tiltmeter simply measures the tilt or slope of the ground.) Laser-equipped instruments precisely measure the distance between points on a volcano so that if the distance between two points changes over time, it
inexpensive GPS instruments and satellite imagery, are helping to improve monitoring of more volcanoes, especially those located in areas where access is difficult. Scientists not only want to predict when a volcano may erupt, but they also want to forecast what type of eruption might occur. Is an eruption likely to entail a slow-moving river of lava or a more deadly and fast pyroclastic flow? If a volcano has erupted in recent history, information on the type of eruption that is likely
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shows that the land has shifted and that magma may be moving below. Scientists also use special instruments to measure the concentration of gases emitted by a volcano. Because gas rises through a volcano faster than magma, an increase in gas emissions may reveal significant changes in activity long before an explosive eruption occurs. Instruments to measure gas concentrations can be hand-held, placed on the ground, or can even take measurements from a passing airplane or helicopter. Volcanoes can be a dangerous place to work, and acidic gases can damage sensitive instruments. Scientists must take great caution when collecting samples of gas or rock on a volcano. They often try to deploy equipment or use technology that does not require them to make repeated visits to potentially active sites. Satellite technology is also providing an exciting and relatively new means to study volcanoes. Instruments onboard satellites can detect high concentrations of sulfur dioxide gas in the atmosphere or changes in the surface temperature associated with volcanic activity. Scientists can also compare detailed satellite-derived images of a volcano to look at precise changes in elevation or the geography of the landscape over time. Satellite technology is especially advantageous for the study of volcanoes located in remote regions and also reduces the amount of time scientists must spend in the vicinity of a potentially dangerous volcano.
to occur may be more readily available. In most cases, however, little is known about a volcanos past eruptions, and scientists must rely on the geology of the surrounding land for information. They may find clues to a volcanos past in buried layers of ash, in pyroclastic debris, or in the remains of a mudflow. By studying the geologic evidence around a volcano, scientists can assess what kind of eruptions have previously occurred, how often they have happened, and what areas may be most at risk in the future.
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Volcanic Hazards and Reducing Risk
TODAY, SCIENTISTS HAVE BETTER INSTRUMENTS THAN EVER BEFORE TO study and monitor volcanoes. We have a better understanding of how, why, and where volcanoes occur and what the signs of an impending eruption are. We are getting better and better at recognizing the hazards that volcanoes present, and many people are now working to reduce the risks to nearby communities. Volcanic eruptions remain a serious hazard in many parts of the world, however, and many lives could be saved with better prediction capabilities and alert systems. In many cases, scientists and emergency responders have learned from previous disasters in order to respond more effectively and successfully to eruptions that have followed.
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volcanoes built behind the Cascadian Subduction Zone. Eruptions tend to be explosive and in the past have included deadly pyroclastic flows, debris avalanches, and surging mudflows. Scientists are studying and closely monitoring the volcanoes of the Cascade Range and helping to educate people in the region about the possible dangers of their beloved mountains. Yellowstone National Park is famous for its beautiful scenery, wildlife, and especially its many hot springs, boiling mud pools, and regularly spouting geysers. The park owes its fascinating hydrothermal activity to what lays beneath the ground: a simmering volcano. Scientists now believe that three of the largest volcanic eruptions on Earth took place in Yellowstone. Geologic evidence suggests that during these eruptions, a thick blanket of volcanic ash was spread over much of the western and central United States. The eruptions also produced a huge caldera, tens of miles wide, which formed when an underlying magma chamber collapsed. There has not been an explosive eruption in Yellowstone National Park for thousands of years, and a recent assessment does not predict one anytime soon. Nevertheless, with hot magma still beneath its surface, Yellowstone does pose a volcanic hazard. In 2001, the USGS, Yellowstone National Park, and the University of Utah jointly established the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory (YVO). Scientists are closely monitoring the earthquake and hydrothermal activity, as well as changes in gas emissions and ground deformation in the region. They are also assessing and mapping out the volcanic hazards and have established an alert system.
THe FutuRe
The Earth by its very nature and history is a restless planet. Earthquakes, tsunamis, and volcanic eruptions have been occurring for millions of years. We cannot stop them from happening. We can, however, learn as much as possible about why, where, and how these powerful forces are unleashed. We can identify what the dangers are and who is most at risk. And we can better prepare, warn, and educate people who live in harms way. The human population of Earth continues to grow. There are more people living in areas at risk from earthquakes or volcanoes than ever before. That is the bad news. The good news is that through scientific studies and lessons learned from events of the past, we understand more about earthquakes and volcanoes than ever before. A huge step forward came with the revolutionary concept known as plate tectonics. Our technology to study the Earth, earthquakes, and volcanoes has also advanced greatly and continues to progress. In addition to research, scientists now use sophisticated tools to monitor earthquake and volcanic activity. They are also working with local authorities and emergency managers to better prepare and warn people when possible. Throughout the world, people are also being better educated about the dangers of earthquakes and volcanoes, though more needs to be donemuch more, as illustrated by the tragic loss of life in China due to the May 2008 7.9 magnitude earthquake and the 2004 Indonesian tsunami.
Glossary
103
104 EARtHQuAKes AnD voLcAnoes Core The innermost layer of the Earth. It is most likely made
up of a very dense mixture of metals. Crust The outermost layer of the Earth and part of the lithosphere. It can be either continental or oceanic. Crystalline Made of, or containing, crystals. Deep-sea trench A long, narrow, and deep trench in the seafloor, marking an underlying subduction zone. Dissolved Absorbed within a liquid solution. Divergent boundary Where two tectonic plates are moving away from one another or spreading apart. Epicenter The point on the Earths surface located directly above the underground location, called the hypocenter, where an earthquake starts. Friction The resistance, or stickiness, that is created when one object moves against another object. Geology The study of the Earth and its structure, rocks, soils, and minerals. Groundwater Water that is underground. Hydrothermal vent Fractures in the Earths surface under the sea; hydrothermal vents emit water that has been heated by molten material or by heat within the Earth. Hypocenter The exact location under the Earths surface where an earthquake originates. Lava Magma, or molten rock material, that has erupted on the Earths surface. Lithosphere The outer, rigid shell of the Earth; it is broken up into plates and is made up of the upper mantle and crust; it is located above the asthenosphere. Magma Molten rock material within the Earth. Magnitude A measure of an earthquakes size. Mantle The Earths rocky interior between the outer core and crust. Mid-ocean ridge The undersea mountain chain that forms due to the moving apart of tectonic plates and the creation of new ocean crust.
Bibliography
Bolt, Bruce. Earthquakes. New York: W.H. Freeman, 2003. Decker, Robert and Barbara Decker. Volcanoes. New York: W.H. Freeman, 1998. Dickinson, William. A Revolution in Our Time. Geotimes 43 (1998): 2125. Hough, Susan. Earthshaking Science: What We Know (and Dont Know) about Earthquakes. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2004. Gonzalez, Frank. Tsunami! Scientific American 280 (1999): 61. Grotzinger, John, Thomas Jordan, Frank Press, and Raymond Siever. Understanding Earth, 5th Edition. New York: W.H. Freeman, 2006. Kraft, Maurice. Volcanoes: Fire from the Earth. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1993. Lay, Thorne, Hiroo Kanamori, Charles J. Ammon, Meredith Nettles, Steven N. Ward, Richard C. Aster, Susan L. Beck et al. The Great Sumatra-Andaman Earthquake of 26 December 2004. Science 308 (2005): 1127-1133. National Geographic Society. Restless Earth. Washington D.C.: National Geographic Society, 1997. Prager, Ellen. Furious Earth: The Science and Nature of Earthquakes, Volcanoes, and Tsunamis. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2000. Schmincke, Hans-Ulrich. Volcanism. Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 2004.
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Bibliography 107
Scientific American Special Edition. Our Ever Changing Earth. Vol. 15 (2005). Sigurdsson, Haraldur. Encylopedia of Volcanoes. San Diego: Academic Press, 2000. Tilling, Robert. Mount St. Helens 20 Years Later: What Weve Learned. Geotimes 45 (2000): 1519. Tilling, Robert. Volcanoes. Denver, Colo.: U.S. Geological Survey, 1997.
Further Reading
Deem, James. Bodies From the Ash: Life and Death in Ancient Pompeii. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2005. DK Publishing. Volcanoes and Earthquakes. New York: DK Eyewitness Books, 2004. Kious, W. Jacquelyne and Robert Tilling. This Dynamic Earth: The Story of Plate Tectonics. Washington D.C.: U.S. Geological Survey, 1996. Lauber, Patricia. Volcano: The Eruption and Healing of Mount St. Helens. New York: Aladdin Books, 1993. OMeara, Donna. Into the Volcano: A Volcano Researcher at Work. Kids Can Press, 2007. Osborne, Mary Pope and Bonnie Christensen. Pompeii: Lost and Found. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2006. Patent, Dorothy Hinshaw and William Munoz. Shaping the Earth. New York: Clarion Books, 2000.
WEB SITES
There are now many Web sites related to earth science, earthquakes, and volcanoes. Here are just a few that will provide good and reliable information on these important and fascinating topics: Dive and Discover: Expeditions to the Seafloor www.divediscover.whoi.edu/ An excellent Web site from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution where you can learn about expeditions to the deep sea;
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Picture Credits
Page 8: David Weintraub/Photo Researchers, Inc. 10: Infobase Publishing 11: Infobase Publishing 13: Infobase Publishing 14: Infobase Publishing 17: Infobase Publishing 19: Infobase Publishing 20: Infobase Publishing 21: Getty Images 23: Ralph White/Corbis 28: Dembinsky Photo Associates 30: Gary Hincks/Photo Researchers, Inc. 31: Infobase Publishing 33: Infobase Publishing 37: Infobase Publishing 38: Infobase Publishing 40: Corbis 42: Infobase Publishing 54: AP Images 58: Infobase Publishing 59: Infobase Publishing 67: Bettmann/Corbis 70: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 72: Infobase Publishing 73: Infobase Publishing 74: Dembinsky Photo Associates 76: Alamy 79: Infobase Publishing 82: Corbis 84: Corbis 86: Dembinsky Photo Associates 88: Infobase Publishing
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Index
A
San Andreas Fault in, 26, 32 33, 45, 46 volcanic regions in, 98
Alaska Earthquake Information Center, 27 Alvin (submersible), 22 amplitude, of seismic waves, 36 ancient times, 9 Andes, 25 andesite, 72 animal behavior, to predict earthquakes, 48 asthenosphere, 18, 19 Australian Plate, 32
Caribbean Plate, 25 Cascade Mountain Range, 69, 9899 Cascadian Subduction Zone, 99 chemical composition
of Earth, 17, 18 of lava, 72
Chile, 29, 32 China, 48, 101 cinder cones, 87 climate, 11 Colombia, 9293 composite volcanoes, 8387 compression waves, 3637 computer modeling
of earthquakes, 44 of tsunamis, 61, 63
continental crust, 18, 25 continental drift, 1012 convection, 1820, 21 convergent boundaries, 2426 core, 17, 18 crust
continental, 18, 25 Earths, 1718 oceanic, 15, 18, 25
calderas, 83 California
earthquakes in, 2728, 3233, 4647, 4950 Parkfield, 46
crystalline material, 18
112
Index 113
dacite, 72 deep-sea trenches, 15, 25 dissolved gas, 78 divergent boundaries, 24 dormant volcanoes, 85, 87 drilling instruments, 44 early warning systems. See warning systems Earth
interior of, 1620 magnetic field of, 1315, 18
geology, 10 global positioning systems (GPS) receivers, 41, 44, 90 gods, 9 Great African Rift Valley, 7577 ground shaking, 49 groundwater, 48
Haicheng, China, 48 Hawaiian Islands, 7375, 8283, 98 Himalayas, 25 home construction, earthquake safety and, 50 hot spots, 7375 hydrothermal vents, 2223 hypocenter, 36, 38
Indian Ocean tsunami (2004), 5556, 62, 63, 101 Indian Plate, 32 Indonesia
earthquakes in, 2829 tsunamis in, 5556, 59, 62, 63, 101 volcanic eruptions in, 68
instruments
to detect tsunamis, 63 drilling, 44 earthquake, 41, 44
J
Japan, early warning systems in, 5052
Marianas Trench, 15, 25 Marina District (San Francisco), 4950 marine life, near hydrothermal vents, 2223 Mauna Kea, 87 Mauna Loa, 75, 82 meteorologists, 10 microearthquakes, 46 Mid-Atlantic Ridge, 24 mid-ocean ridges, 12
as divergent plate boundary, 24 earthquakes along, 30, 31 magnetism and, 1315 spreading of, 24 volcanoes and, 6871
lahars, 98 Lake Nyos, 89 lakes, volcanic, 8889 laser technology, 9091 lava, 69, 72, 83, 84, 85 lava dome, 85 layers, of Earth, 1618 legends, 9 Lesser Antilles, 71 life, on seafloor, 22 lithosphere, 18, 19, 20 Lituya Bay, Alaska, 5354, 57 Loma Prieta earthquake (1989), 4950 Lulu (ship), 22
minerals, 13 Mohorovicic Discontinuity, 18 molten rock, plumes of, 21 Mount Fuji, 85 Mount Hood, 85, 98 Mount Kilaueau, 74 Mount Pinatubo, 9495 Mount Ranier, 85, 98 Mount St. Helens, 6869, 81, 85, 86, 98 Mount Vesuvius, 6768, 85 mountains
formation of, 2425 undersea, 12, 13
magma, 13, 14
composition of, 69, 7273, 80 movement of, 7172, 7880
magnetism, patterns of, 1315 magnetometer, 1213 magnitude, 27, 3435 mainshock, 43 mantle, 17, 18, 1920 maps
of ground shaking, 49 seismic hazard, 49 of volcanic hazards, 9798
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), 63 Nazca Plate, 25 Nevado del Ruiz volcano, 81, 9293 New Madrid, Missouri earthquakes, 3436 nickel, 17 normal faults, 41, 42 North American Plate, 26, 35 North Pacific Region, 100 Northridge earthquake (1994), 28, 43 nue ardente, 8485
Index 115
O
ocean depth, measurement of, 12 ocean floor. See seafloor oceanic crust, 18
age of, 15 collision of, 25 creation of, 15
Redoubt Volcano, 100 remotely operated vehicles (ROVs), 22 rhyolite, 72 Richter, Charles, 35 Richter Scale, 35 Ring of Fire, 30, 31, 32, 71 risk reduction
from earthquakes, 5052 from volcanoes, 98101
Pacific Northwest, 29 Pacific Plate, 25, 26, 75 Pacific Ring of Fire, 30, 31, 32, 71 Pacific Tsunami Warning Center, 62 pahoehoe lava, 83, 84 Pakistan earthquake (2005), 29, 32 Parkfield, California, 46 Peru-Chile trench, 25 Philippine Plate, 25 Philippines, 9495 physical structure, of Earth, 18 pillow lavas, 70 plate tectonics. See also tectonic plates
concept of, 912 continental drift and, 1012 earthquakes and, 24, 3036 evolution of theory of, 1516 movement of tectonic plates, 1820, 24 plate boundaries, 20, 2426 volcanoes and, 6877
safety
earthquake, 51 tsunami, 63 volcano, 100101
San Andreas Fault, 26, 33, 45, 46 San Andreas Fault Observatory, 46 San Francisco earthquake (1906), 28, 3233 satellite technology, 41, 44, 91 science, 9 seafloor
hydrothermal vents in, 2223 life on, 22 magnetism in, 1315 study of, 1216 vertical movement of, 5657
plumes, 21 Pompeii, 6768 population growth, 101 Portugal, 29 pressure, in Earths interior, 18 primary waves, 3637, 5152 pumice, 85 P-waves, 3637, 5152 pyroclastic debris, 8485 pyroclasts, 8485
seafloor spreading, 1415 Seattle, Washington, 49 secondary waves, 37, 52 sediment, 25 sedimentary rock, 49 seismic activity, patterns of, 3036 seismic cycles, 4546 seismic hazards, 4850 seismic stations, 38 seismic waves, 16
amplitude of, 36 detection of, 38, 5152 P-waves, 3637, 5152 S-waves, 37, 52 types of, 3637
Q
quicksand, 4950
temperature, in Earths interior, 18 thrust faults, 41, 42 tidal waves. See tsunamis tiltmeters, 90 tools. See also instruments
for earthquakes, 41, 44 for volcanoes, 9091, 100
toxic fumes, 8889 transform faults, 15, 26, 3133 trenches, deep-sea, 15, 25 tsunami safety, 63 tsunamis, 7, 27, 29
about, 5354 danger from, 5960 detection of, 6162 Indian Ocean (2004), 5556, 62, 63, 101 at shore, 5860 study of, 6061 travel by, 5759 triggers of, 5354, 5657 warning signs of, 64 warning systems for, 56, 6265 waves from, 5758, 59
submersibles, 22 Sumatra, 2829, 5556 Sumatra earthquake (2004), 32, 36, 55 supercontinents, 10, 12 S-waves, 37, 52
Typhoon Yunya, 94
undersea earthquakes, 5354, 5657 undersea volcanoes, 15, 6871 United States, volcanic regions in, 9899 U.S. Geological survey alert system, 96
boundaries of, 20, 2426 collision of, 2426, 31 earthquakes along boundaries of, 3036 earthquakes on interior of, 3436 hot spots and, 7375 movement of, 1820, 24, 3132
Index 117
science of, 7880 stratovolcanic, 8485 types of, 9091 undersea, 15, 6871 in subduction zones, 26 types of, 8087, 88 undersea, 15, 6871 understanding, 89 warning systems for, 100
Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI), 81 volcanic lakes, 8889 volcanic rocks, 7273, 85 volcanic tremor, 90 volcanoes
alert and notification systems, 96 benefits of, 8 cinder cones, 87 composite (strato), 8387 converging plate, 7173 danger from, 79, 66, 93, 97 dormant, 85, 87 hot spot, 7375 internal structure of, 79 mapping hazards from, 9798 mid-ocean ridges and, 6871 monitoring of, 8990, 95, 99100 number of, 66 plate tectonics and, 6877 Rift Valley, 7577 risk reduction from, 98101 shield, 8283
volcanologists, 78, 89
warning signs
of earthquakes, 4748 of tsunamis, 64
warning systems
for earthquakes, 5152 for tsunamis, 56, 6265 for volcanoes, 100
DR. ELLEN PRAGER is a marine geologist who specializes in bringing earth and ocean science to the public. She is currently the Chief Scientist for the Aquarius Reef Base program in Key Largo, Florida, which includes the worlds only operating undersea research station (www.uncw.edu/aquarius). She has previously worked as a geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey and has published several popular science and childrens books about earth and ocean science. She is a frequently requested public speaker and has appeared on national television as an expert when earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, or tsunamis occur.
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