Geophysics and Earthquakes: GY 111 Lecture Note Series
Geophysics and Earthquakes: GY 111 Lecture Note Series
Geophysics and Earthquakes: GY 111 Lecture Note Series
D. Haywick (2016-17)
A) Seismic waves and the Earth's interior (Verbatim recap from Lecture 2 up to the start of Earthquakes)
If we all lived in a Star Trek universe, exploring the interior of the Earth would be comparatively
easy. All you'd have to do is use scanners or beam a chunk of it up to the Enterprise and let Data
or Spock examine it with a tricorder. Unfortunately, we are a long way from that type of
exploration.
Today, there are really only a few ways that we can explore the interior of the Earth. I can think
of 3 ways:
1) Drill a hole: Geologists have been drilling holes into the Earth
since the late 1800's. This is easy. All you need is a drilling rig, some
drilling pipe and a drill bit. If I have the time (and remember to bring
them in), will see some examples of drill bits in the lecture. They look
pretty impressive (especially the big ones!), but they really are simple
devices. They have rotating tungsten-carbide cutters that grind away
the rock as they turn. A bit is attached to a length of drill pipe and the
whole thing is turned in the rig complex. As the bit descends deeper
into the Earth, pipes are added to the assemblage extending its
penetration. Today, petroleum geologists regularly drill holes that
exceed 20,000 feet (almost 4 miles) to obtain natural gas (e.g., Mobile
Bay). They can go deeper, but there would have be pretty good
economic reasons to do so because of the cost involved in drilling.
There are a few academic holes out there and I had the opportunity
to visit one of them in the fall of 2006. I was at a conference in
Bavaria, German and the intra-conference field trip was to the German Deep Borehole project
(see image at bottom of this page). In the 1980s, the Germans began a project to drill the worlds
deepest well in order to study high temperature geochemical/geophysical processes. They planned
on going down to 12 km (almost 7 miles), but
stopped at 9 km (5 miles) when they hit
temperatures around 325C (their target).
Apparently they miscalculated the geothermal
gradient in this area. So their hole is NOT the
worlds deepest (that record is held by a well
in California), but it is still the deepest
currently open borehole. Indeed, the project is
still active and geologists from around the
world come here to study subsurface
conditions not otherwise possible. They kept
the drilling complex up (see photo to right)
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and added a nice visitors center to the site where you can buy all manner of crap, including rock
cuttings (the remnants of the rock drilled through to make the hole).
If you are wondering how far down can we go, well at the present time, it really is not possible to
exceed more than 10 miles by conventional drilling. The metal drill bits simply start to melt if
you go too deep. So until we develop new technology (where's Captain Kirk when you need
him!), we will have to rely on other sources of deep Earth information.
2) Get physical samples from volcano: Volcanoes are simply holes at the Earth's surface where
molten rock escapes from the interior. It follows that the stuff erupting from a volcano tells you
about the nature of rocks, fluids and gases below the surface (there is more erupted from a
volcano than just lava; there are horrendous amounts of gases including water vapor). Each
active volcano is underlain by one or more magma chambers 5 to 20 km or so below the surface.
In some cases (e.g., above hot spots), the magma may be derived from much deeper. But as useful
as these samples are, they are isolated to specific points on the Earth. What's really needed to sort
out the Earth's interior is some sort of technique that allows us to build up a coherent picture of
the whole darn planet. What we need is rock version of radar or medical X-rays. Luckily for us,
such a technique exists. It's called geophysics.
Geophysics, as the name implies, is a combination of geology and
physics. Specifically, it is the study of how shock waves (officially
called seismic waves) travel through the Earth. To explain how this
works, it is best to once again turn to petroleum geology (see cartoon
to right from http://www.naturalgas.org). Since the early 1900's
geologists have used seismic waves to look for petroleum
reservoirs. What they do is install a series of microphones (called
geophones) and listen to how seismic waves travel through the rock
over time. The seismic waves used to be generated through
explosions, but now we simply use thumpers, devices that repeatedly
lift and drop heavy metal plates on the ground. The result is similar to
the effect of smashing a hammer on a cement floor. Seismic waves
can also be generated at sea through the use of "pingers" (these
devices generate sound waves of a specific frequency that are capable
of traveling through rock layers). My favorite type of seismic survey are the convoy type
systems whereby large truck like components simply drive across the countryside recording the
seismic stratigraphy below the surface as they go. The Lithoprobe project (see image to left
from http://www.geop.ubc.ca/ Lithoprobe/transect/SOSS) is an example of this type of survey. Five or
six vehicles that each do something (one pings, one records, the others listen) can quickly do
a seismic line many hundreds of km long. Hey; this is almost Star Trek-scale science!
No matter how the seismic waves are
generated, they all travel through the earth
following specific physical rules. As they travel
from one medium to another (one rock type to
another), they can speed up or slow down,
bounce back toward the surface, or even stop
entirely. Before we focus on the behavior of
seismic waves, it is perhaps best to first
consider something that you are more familiar
with through high school physics classes; light
waves.
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When light passes from one medium (e.g., air) to another (e.g., water),
it changes speed. From air to water, the light rays slow down. To your
eye which requires reflected light to see things, the change in speed is
perceived as a change in the orientation of objects that pass from air
into water. This is what causes the "broken arm" appearance when you
stick your arm into a pool of water or the displaced fish perception (see
image to right from http://www.iop.org), when you go to clean your
aquarium. This property is called refraction. Light waves can also
bounce or reflect off of surfaces which is the reason why we can
perceive them with our eyes in the first place. Seismic waves do exactly
the same thing and if you are a clever petroleum geologist, you can use
the pattern of reflections combined with refractions to build up a coherent picture of the rock
layers below the surface (see nasty image to left from http://www.geo.uu.nl). Of course you do need
a computer to time the arrival of all of the reflected seismic waves and to sort these data into a
picture of the rock layers. Even still, there is a significant amount of skill that is required to "read"
these images. Like all scientific techniques, becoming an
expert in seismic stratigraphy (this is the science of
resolving rock layers via geophysical techniques; see image
at
the
bottom
right
of
this
page
from
http://www.cpfieldinstitute.org) requires practice, practice,
practice.
Now lets turn back to the Earth's interior. A thumper or
small explosion is sufficient to generate a seismic pulse that
can be recorded by geophones in the vicinity of the source
of the waves, but there is only so far that these waves can
travel before they diminish to nothing. In order to resolve structures near the center of the Earth,
we need either really large explosions (which are fun, but difficult to obtain licenses for), or
another recurring source of powerful seismic waves. Depending upon your point of view, we are
lucky (or unlucky) to have just a source of these waves. They are called earthquakes.
Earthquakes occur when
stresses build up beyond
the ability of rock layers to
resist them. There is a
sudden break, a release of
built up energy and
formation
of
seismic
waves. Earthquakes will
be discussed shortly, but
right now, we need to
discuss what happens
when an earthquake occurs
in
order
to
better
understand geophysics and
the Earth's interior.
Earthquakes are capable of generating 2 major Earth-penetrating types of seismic waves (also
called body waves; see image at the top right of the next page):
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Or a tidal wave if you are ignorant or a Hollywood producer of bad geo-movies, or, as is often the case,
both.
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worst thing that can happen to you if you live on the coast.
Thousands of people have been killed by these waves most
recently on December 26, 2004. This tsunami was
generated by a powerful earthquake very near to Sumatra
in Indonesia. One side of the wave hit Sumatra almost
immediately after the earthquake killing thousands. The
other side of the wave swept across the Indian Ocean (see
image
to
left
from
http://www.baird.com
/baird/en_html/indian_ocean/.html) hitting India, Sri Lanka
and eastern Africa killing thousands more. Even 2 years
after the event, no one knows the total number killed, but
estimates are in the 200,000 to 300,000 range. Since the event, geological agencies around the
world have been working to improve the warning response time for geological events like
tsunamis. They have also been working to improve hazard education. They have a long way to
go.
There are several very interesting images, animations, and models of the Dec 26th tsunami. If you
are interested, visit this page:
http://www.baird.com/baird/en_html/indian_ocean/indianocean.html
B) Earthquake intensity and magnitude
After this very long discussion on seismic waves, it's time to turn our attention to earthquakes. In
an earlier lecture, we discussed epicenters and foci. This was the diagram that we used:
Recall that the focus is the point on the fault plain where seismic wave are generated during an
earthquake and that the epicenter is the point on the Earths surface directly above the focus. Its
the place where surface waves radiate from (including tsunamis). The size of an earthquake, or at
least the effects that human experience, depends on the depth of the focus and the energy released
by the earthquake. Geologists tend to use two concepts when discussing earthquake size. The
first is magnitude which is an estimate of energy released. The second is intensity which
measures the destructiveness of the earthquake. Earthquake intensity is frequently determined by
the Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale which can be viewed as a people scale. A poll of people
affected by the earthquake is done to determine where the worst effects were felt. The argument
goes like this: the site of maximum damage is likely where the epicenter was, and the level of
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damage can be used to estimate the strength of the earthquake. The Modified Mercalli Intensity
Scale has 12 levels:
The good thing about the scale is that you can retroactively use it to
estimate the size of ancient earthquakes like the New Madrid
earthquakes
in
1811-12
(see
image
to
left
from
http://geology.about.com). You do this by examining historical
records. The bad thing about the scale is that people arent particularly
trustworthy when it comes to honest opinions. We are too easily
swayed (consider the stories I told you in class).
A far better approach, and the one preferred by geologists, is a
geophysical scale. The Modified Richter Scale uses geophysical data to determine the location
of epicenters and earthquake magnitude. It uses the data
collected by seismographs (see figure to right from
http://www.gly.fsu.edu/~salters) to do this. Seismographs
record ground motion generated by an earthquake and are
sensitive enough to detect even relatively weak
earthquakes on the other side of the planet. Of course, in
order to do this, they have to be amplified like crazy and
they consequently have to be protected from unwanted
interference (human-induced bumps and shocks,
microwaves etc). For this reason, seismographs are
usually buried in caves, mine shafts or the sub basements
of buildings.
A seismogram is the output of a seismograph. It
is a series of squiggly lines that reflect the
arrival of body waves (P-waves first, S-waves
second) and surface waves (last) at the
seismograph section (the image to left is from
http://www.ngdir.ir). I wish that I could say that
it is easy to measure the magnitude of an
earthquake from a seismogram, but the truth is it
isnt. In fact, there are a couple of different
mathematical ways to measure magnitude.
Neither is a simple matter of measuring the
amplitude of the squiggly line which depends
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more on your proximity to the focus rather than the size of the earthquake 2. In GY 111, we dont
have to know how to measure earthquake magnitude 3, but you should be aware that the numbers
we use are based on a logarithmic scale (base 10). The Modified Richter Scale varies from a low
of 1 to a maximum of 10, but in reality, the highest you can go is about 9.5. Rocks have a limited
strength and none can resist forces long enough to produce a magnitude 10 quake 4. Because the
scale is logarithmic, each increase in magnitude is actually 10 times increase in ground motion.
Magnitude
Effects
# per year
(worldwide)
(source http://earthquakescanada.nrcan.gc.ca)
Source: USGS
2
3
Strength
compared to a
Magnitude 3
quake
-100
1,300,000
-10
130,000
--
13,000
10
1300
100
150
1000
20
10,000
100,000
<1
1,000,000
10
10,000,000
The actual energy released by an earthquake is even more impressive. Every increase in
magnitude corresponds to a 30 times increase in energy output. An earthquake of magnitude 8
therefore produces 300,000 times the amount of energy of a magnitude 3 earthquake. Energy
release is illustrated graphically in a figure from http://www.gly.fsu.edu/~salter at the top of the
next page.
2
If you are close to a weak earthquake the seismogram is likely to be more squiggly that if you were a long
way from a powerful earthquake.
But if you are interested. The two methods to determine earthquake magnitude are body wave method,
defined as mb = log(A/T) + Q(D,h) and the surface-wave method, defined as Ms = log(A/T) + 1.66 logD +
3.30. In both cases, A is the ground motion (in microns), T is the wave's period (in seconds), and Q(D,h) is
a correction factor that depends on distance to the quake's epicenter D (in degrees) and focal depth h (in
kilometers).
4
Which is usually forgotten by Hollywood movie producers that are making earthquake disaster movies.
D. Haywick (2016-17)
C)
Seismographs and locating earthquake epicenters on maps
You will have a chance to do an exercise on epicenter location in one of the lab exercises
(Chapter 7 of your lab manual) sometime soon. In fact, rathewr than reinventing the wheel, I have
extracted the most relevant material from the lab manual below.
There is a fundamentally useful difference between P- and S-waves that we can use to determine
when and where an earthquake has occurred. P-waves travel faster than S-waves. If you are near
the epicenter of an earthquake, the two packages of waves more or less arrive simultaneously (or
you would be too busy rolling all over the floor to notice any lag between them), but if you are a
long way from the epicenter, there is a distinct separation between the arrival time of the P- and
S-waves. It follows that the further away that a seismograph is from the epicenter of an
earthquake, the more the separation between the two sets of waves. When an earthquake occurs,
even if it is a long way off, ground motion is measurable with seismographs that are enhanced
with amplifiers. In the figure to the right from http://astroweb.cwru.edu, you can clearly see the
separation between the S and P waves. The arrival times for P- and S-waves will differ at each
seismograph
location
depending
upon
their
distance from the epicenter.
So too will the separation
between the two types of
waves. The arrival time of
the P-waves is designated as
Tp. The arrival time of the
S-waves is designated Ts.
The difference between them
(Ts-Tp) is designated as T
and it is measured in
seconds.
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The figure below is a graph that summarizes time versus distance traveled of P- and Swaves following an earthquake. The horizontal separation (along the x axis) between the
two lines is T . If, for example, T exactly equaled 10.0 seconds (as it does in the lab
exercise you will get), you would see that it corresponded to a distance of about 100 km
(read across to the y axis). Hence the earthquake epicenter had to be 100 km away from
the seismograph station that you got the data from. Unfortunately you don't really know
which direction the epicenter was from that site. You would have to draw a circle of
radius 100 km centered on the site to figure out where the epicenter might have been.
This procedure is repeated for two additional sites (each with different Ts) in order to
find the epicenter via triangulation.
500
S-wave
450
P-wave
400
350
300
250
200
150
100
50
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
Date
1. Chile
Magnitude2
9.5
3
9.2
March 9, 1957
9.1
4. Kamchatka
Nov. 4, 1952
9.0
9.0
8.8
Feb. 4, 1965
8.7
8.7
9. India-China border
8.6
10. Kamchatka
Feb. 3, 1923
8.5
100
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Location
Shansi, China
Deaths Magnitude
830,000
~8
Tangshan, China
255,0001
7.5
Aug. 9, 1138
Aleppo, Syria
230,000
n.a.
9.0
Damghan, Iran
200,000
n.a.
200,000
7.9
200,000
7.8
150,000
n.a.
Sept. 1, 1923
Kwanto, Japan
143,000
7.9
Oct. 5, 1948
110,000
7.3
70,000
100,0003
7.2
Sept. 1290
Chihli, China
100,000
n.a.
Oct. 8, 2005
Pakistan
80,361
7.6
Nov. 1667
Shemakha, Caucasia
80,000
n.a.
77,000
n.a.
70,000
7.6
Nov. 1, 1755
Lisbon, Portugal
70,000
8.7
Peru
66,000
7.9
Quetta, Pakistan
30,000
60,000
7.5
Sicily, Italy
60,000
n.a.
60,000
n.a.
50,000
7.7
Feb. 4, 1783
50,000
n.a.
1268
Calabria, Italy
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