Earthquakes
Seismic Waves
Volcanoes
Lava flows
Choose your own adventure
100

True or false. We can predict earthquakes.

false

100

Two types of seismic waves

Surface and body waves
100

What are the three types of volcanoes? 

Shield, cinder cone, composite

100

What is pyroclastic material? 

Rock, dust, ash that explodes from a volcano

100

The area of land surrounding the pacific plate where the majority of active volcanoes are found

The Ring of Fire

200

How do we measure an earthquake's intensity? 

observable destructiveness

200

Difference between love waves and rayleigh waves

love - irregular, side to side, faster

Rayleigh - up and down, most destructive

200

What are the three phases of a volcano? 

Active (in the last 10,000 years)

Dormant (hasn't erupted in 10,000 years but expected to again some day)

Extinct (no longer expected to erupt)

200

Which is the most explosive type of lava? 

Granitic (most gas and thickest)

200

small shakes that occur after a major earthquake

aftershock

300

This method is what is used to locate the epicenter of an earthquake

Triangulation

300

Which wave hits the seismic station first? 

P wave - type of body wave

300

this volcano is the largest

shield

300

This type of lava forms on the ocean floor

Pillow lava

300

Where did Ms. Silance go to college? 

UCLA
400

Explain the difference between the epicenter and the focus. 

Focus - center of earthquake activity (where it starts)

Epicenter - location directly above focus on the surface of the earth

400

On a seismogram, which wave displays the highest amplitude (causes the most destruction)? 

Surface waves

400

Explain the difference between effusive and explosive eruptions

effusive - slow, non violent

explosive - rapid, sends particles in the air, violent

400

What are the two types of basaltic lava? Describe what they look like.

Aa (cooler, thicker, slower) - rough and jagged

Pahoehoe (hotter, thinner, faster) - twisted and ropey

400

How do earthquake scientists use P and S waves to determine the how far the focus of the earthquake is from the station? (First step in triangulation)

Measure the p-s time interval (difference in when P and S waves hit) 

500

To produce an earthquake, what must occur? 

Stress and pressure build up on a fault that overcomes the friction and "rebounds" 

(Elastic rebound theory)

500

List 3 differences between P waves and S waves

P - first, faster than S, passes through all material

S - second, slower than P, passes through solids only

500

Give 3 major hazards of volcanoes

Lava flows, pyroclastic flows, lahar, tsunamis, volcanic ash, death, crop fatalities, respiratory effects
500

This is the term used for mudslides/land displacement that occurs after a volcano

Lahar
500

Which earthquake was the largest one ever recorded? 

Chilean earthquake of 1960

M
e
n
u