Tectonic Forces
Boundaries
Faults and Joints
Earth Waves and Seismology
Effects of Earthquakes
100

Any shaking of the ground measurable by seismic instruments, most are too gentle for people to feel

What is an earthquake?

100

Earthquakes are most common near the edges of these

What are tectonic boundaries?

100

A crack in a rock where movement has occurred

What is a fault?

100

An instrument that both detects and records earth waves

What is a seismograph?

100

An ocean wave caused by an earthquake

What is a tsunami?

200

An instrument that simply detects earth waves

What is a seismometer?

200

Some earthquakes can occur at other places where these exist, far from tectonic boundaries

What are faults?

200

A crack in rock where there is no visible movement along the surface

What is a joint?

200

The center of earthquake activity

What is the focus?

200

This type of earthquake magnitude scale is what geologists use to report to the public, there is no upper limit, but this scale doesn't work well for earthquakes stronger than a magnitude of 7

What is the Richter scale?

300

Modern seismologists believe that faults and earthquakes are caused by this

What are tectonic forces?

300

When plate sections move apart from each other

What are divergent boundaries?

300

Transform faults are also know as these

What are strike-slip faults?

300

The fastest body wave

What is a P wave?

300

A source of danger

What is a hazard?

400

This exists when two forces acting in opposite directions attempt to slide parts of the object past each other, it is the type of stress most significant in causing earthquakes.

What is shear?

400

When plates move toward each other

What are convergent boundaries?

400

What is the fault (or fault line)?

400

These are the last waves to reach a seismic station, the two basic wave forms are Rayleigh waves and Love waves

What are surface waves?

400

The possibility of injury or death to people and damage to property, this can be reduced or eliminated

What is a risk?

500

This type of stress is a pulling motion. An example is the force that a rock climber exerts on the rope as he rappels down a cliff.

What is tension?

500

Subduction would most likely be occurring at this type of boundry

What is a convergent boundary?

500

The horizontal direction of a fault

What is the strike?

500

The point on Earth's surface above the center of earthquake activity, seismologists need data from at least three seismic stations to pinpoint the location

What is the epicenter?

500
Most earthquake-related deaths occur when man-made things fail, such as when ______________.

What is when buildings collapse? 

- or - 

What is when fires start due to broken gas mains or electrical wires?

600

These two properties of a material allow it to change shape without breaking under stress

What are ductility and elasticity?

600

Where plates slide past each other in opposite directions along long cracks in the crust 

What are transform boundaries?

600

The angle of the fault face downward from the horizontal

What is the dip?

600

This type of body wave cannot travel through the earth's core

What is an S wave?

600

If you move up one magnitude on the Richter scale (ex. from a 6.0 magnitude to a 7.0 magnitude), the larger earthquake has about this many times more energy

What is 32 (31.6)?

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