EARTHQUAKES 101
WHEN DISASTER STRIKES
GOING GREEN
FOSSIL FUEL
BUILDING SMART
CALIFORNIA & THE EARTH
100

The point on Earth's surface directly above where an earthquake starts underground.

What is the epicenter?

100

This giant destructive ocean wave can be triggered by a large underwater earthquake.

What is a tsunami?

100

This type of vehicle produces zero direct emissions from burning gasoline.

What is an electric vehicle (EV)?

100

Coal, oil, and natural gas all belong to this category of nonrenewable energy.

What are fossil fuels?

100

Engineers design earthquake-resistant buildings to reduce these two main outcomes.

What are loss of life and property damage?

100

This famous California fault runs along the boundary where two plates slide horizontally past each other.

What is the San Andreas Fault?

200

This instrument detects and records earthquake waves.

What is a seismograph?

200

This is where earthquake damage is typically the worst at the surface.

What is near the epicenter?

200

Solar, wind, hydroelectric, geothermal, and biomass all fall under this category of energy.

What is renewable energy?

200

Of natural gas, oil, and coal, this fossil fuel produces the LEAST air pollution when burned.

What is natural gas?

200

Of tall buildings and short buildings, this type typically suffers more earthquake damage due to swaying.

What are tall buildings?

200

These two natural disasters are California's biggest ongoing risks (one geological, one climate-related).

What are earthquakes and droughts (or heat waves)?

300

The actual underground point where an earthquake starts. 

What is the focus (or hypocenter)?

300

Fires from broken gas lines, landslides, and tsunamis that follow an earthquake are all classified as these.

What are secondary effects?

300

California has lots of this energy source because it sits on an active plate boundary where magma heats underground water.

What is geothermal energy?

300

This is roughly how long it takes for fossil fuels to form, making them nonrenewable.

What is millions of years?

300

For earthquake safety, building on this solid rock is far better than building on loose landfill.

What is bedrock?

300

This type natural resource that relies on underground magma is one of California's main energy source.

What is geothermal?

400

The correct arrival order of the three seismic wave types at a station.

What are P-waves, then S-waves, then Surface waves?

400

A landslide happens when this downward force overcomes the friction holding soil and rock in place on a slope.

What is gravity?

400

A city like Barstow, with consistently high average wind speeds, would be the best place to build these.

What are wind turbines?

400

Among fossil fuels, this one is the most polluting, emitting the most sulfur dioxide and particulates.

What is coal?

400

These small metal devices bolt a house's wooden frame directly to its concrete foundation.

What are foundation clips?

400

This type of correlation describes "as urbanization goes up, EPT species go down."

What is a negative correlation?

500

The name of the scale that we use to measure the STRENGTH of earthquakes is...

What is the Richter scale?

500

A magnitude 6 earthquake releases roughly this many times more energy than a magnitude 4.

What is 900 times more (30 x 30)?

500

A renewable resource is defined as one that can be replenished naturally at or near this rate.

What is the rate of consumption?

500

Nuclear energy is "low greenhouse gas" but still nonrenewable because it relies on this limited element.

What is uranium?

500

When two countries face the same magnitude earthquake but have very different death tolls, having stricter versions of these is the most likely reason.

What are building codes (or earthquake-resistant construction standards)?

500

California is not at major risk for these large tropical storms because its Pacific coast waters are too cold to form or sustain them.

What are hurricanes?