Plate Boundaries and Stress
Faults
Earthquake Basics
Measuring Earthquakes
Earthquake Damage and Buildings
100

The type of plate boundary where two plates slide past each other.

What is a transform boundary? 
100

The name for a crack or break in the crust.

What is a fault? 

100

Earthquakes are ultimately caused by this activity.

What is plate movement? 
100

The name for the scale that measures earthquakes based on the strength of their seismic waves? 

What is the Richter Scale? 
100

The name for smaller earthquakes that follow an initial earthquake due to continued movement of rock under the surface.

What are aftershocks? 

200

The type of plate boundary where two plates move  toward each other.

What is a convergent boundary? 

200

The two parts of a fault.

What are the hanging wall and the footwall?


200

The point under the ground at which rock breaks, leading to an earthquake.

What is the focus? 

200

The name for the device that records seismic waves by hanging a weighted pen above a rotating drum of paper.

What is a seismograph? 

200

The name for the process where the shaking of the Earth during an earthquake causes water and soil to mix into mud.

What is liquefaction? 

300

The kind of plate movement you find at a divergent boundary.

What is two plates moving away from each other? 

300

At this kind of fault, the hanging wall slides up relative to the footwall.

What is a reverse fault? 

300

The name for the type of energy released by the breaking of rock under the surface.

What is a seismic wave?


300

The name for the strip of paper with seismic wave markings on it produced by a seismograph.

What is a seismogram?

300

The name for the large waves produced by earthquakes that occur on or near the surface of the ocean. 

What are tsunamis? 

400

The type of stress found at a convergent boundary, it folds and squeezes the crust.

What is compression? 

400

This type of fault is produced by shearing at a transform boudnary.

What is a strike-slip fault? 

400

The name for the type of seismic wave that reaches the surface first. It moves back-and-forth and compresses the ground. 

What is a Primary wave? 

400

Mr. Nolan is going to draw a picture of a seismogram on the board. There are three zones on the seismogram. This type of seismic wave is represented in the second zone. 

What are Secondary Waves? 

400

The best shape for building an earthquake-resistant structure.

What are triangles? 

500

The type of stress found at a divergent boundary, it stretches and thins the crust.

What is tension?
500

This type of fault produces landforms such as rift valleys or mid-ocean ridges. 

What is a normal fault? 

500

The name for the type of seismic wave that moves back-and-forth and up-and-down.

What is a Surface Wave? 

500

The location for the largest earthquake ever recorded on the Richter Scale.

What is Chile? 
500

This feature of earthquake-resistant structures absorbs the vibrations from seismic waves to reduce the impact of shaking on the building. 

What is a damper? 

M
e
n
u