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SCEC VDO Mini Grand Challenge 2014 Visualizing Earthquake Country

SCEC VDO Mini Grand Challenge 2014 Visualizing Earthquake Country

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SCEC VDO Mini Grand Challenge 2014 Visualizing Earthquake Country. THE GREAT CALIFORNIA SHAKEOUT. Sheila Bart, Greg Berger, Georgina Campos, Garland Chen , Jaquelyn Felix, Brandon Green. Why is California referred to as “earthquake country”?. The frequency of earthquakes in California. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

SCEC VDO Mini Grand

Challenge 2014 Visualizing Earthquake

Country

Page 2: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

THE GREAT CALIFORNIA

SHAKEOUTSheila Bart, Greg Berger, Georgina Campos, Garland Chen, Jaquelyn Felix, Brandon Green

Page 3: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

WHY IS CALIFORNIA REFERRED TO AS

“EARTHQUAKE COUNTRY”?

Page 4: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

The frequency of earthquakes in California

- On average, there are approximately 30 earthquakes each day in California.

- Earthquakes of magnitude 6.0 and greater occur approximately every 5 years.

- In comparison to the central and eastern sections of the United States, California experiences a greater amount of seismicity.

Page 5: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

Fault systems throughout California

- The San Andreas Fault system extends from northern California and continues south past the California border and into Mexico.

- In addition to the San Andreas Fault system, there are a number of other smaller fault systems throughout the state of California.

- The Los Angeles area itself has a number of faults that contribute to both small and relatively large earthquakes.

Page 6: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

Works Cited

❏<earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/states/seismicity>

❏Jones, L., Benthien, M. “Putting down roots in earthquake country”. Southern California Earthquake Center. 2011. <www.earthquakecountry.info/roots/contents.html>

❏Southern California Earthquake Data Center <www.data.scec.org/index.html>

Page 7: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

WHAT TYPE OF FAULTS EXIST IN CALIFORNIA?

The answer may surprise you…

Page 8: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

Normal Faults

What is it? Where is it?

◻Caused by extension◻Outward displacement

◻Death Valley⬜Horst and Graben⬜Elevation: -282 ft

Page 9: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

Reverse Faults

What is it? Where is it?

◻Caused by compression◻Inward displacement

◻Transverse Ranges

Page 10: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

Strike-Slip Faults

What is it? Where is it?

◻Displacement is parallel to fault strike

◻San Andreas Fault

Page 11: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

Oblique Faults

◻A combination of strike-slip and reverse thrusting◻The most common type of fault

What is it?

Page 12: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

Works Cited◻ Bartolomeo, Eleanor, and Nicole Longinotti. "Tectonic history of the Transverse

Ranges: Rotation and deformation on the plate boundary." . UC Davis, n.d. Web. 19 June 2014.

◻ Johnson, Jenda. "What are the 4 basic classes of faults?" Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology. Web. 17 June 2014. http://www.iris.edu/hq/programs/education_and_outreach/animations/2.

◻ Jordan, Tom, Raymon Siever, and John Grotzinger. "Folds, Faults, and Other Records of Rock Deformation." Understanding Earth. New York: Frank Press, 2003. Print.

◻ "Lowest Places on Earth." Death Valley. National Park Service. Web. 17 June 2014.◻ "The San Andreas Fault." USGS. 17 January 2013. Web. 17 June 2014.

http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/earthq3/safaultgip.html.

Page 13: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

PLATE BOUNDARIES IN CALIFORNIA

Page 14: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

Plate Composition

7 km (4 mi) thick Basalt More dense

Varies between 10 and 75 km (6 and 47mi)

Granitic rock Less dense

Oceanic Continental

Page 15: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

Plate Boundaries

Two plates move apart in opposite directions

Think: conveyor belts Magma flows up from

the mantle where plates thin

Mid-ocean ridges

DivergentConvergent Plates pushing into

each other Continental →

Continental Continental → Oceanic Oceanic → Oceanic DENSITY Mountain formation Subduction

Page 16: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

What kind of plate boundaries are found in California?

San Andreas fault zone → Transform Boundary

Pacific plate moves Northwest in relation to NA plate

Great 1906 earthquake that destroyed San Francisco

Transform Horizontal motion past each

other Mostly slide without creating

or destroying material Large earthquakes can occur

at transform plate boundaries

Page 17: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

Works Cited Press, F., Siever, R., Grotzinger, J., Jordan,

T. H., 2003, Understanding Earth “Understanding Plate Motions.” United

States Geological Survey: http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/ dynamic/ understanding.html, May 2012.

Page 18: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

Explain how focal mechanisms

can be determined from earthquake data?

Page 19: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

What are focal mechanisms?

Page 20: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

What are focal mechanisms?

Page 21: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

How are they calculated?

Page 22: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

What does this all mean?Faulting geometry identification Look they’re beach balls!

Page 23: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

compression vs. dilatation

Page 24: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country
Page 25: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country
Page 26: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

Works CitedCronin, Vince, 2004, A Draft Pimer on Focal Mechanism Solution for Geologists, p. 1-14 USGS, 1996. “Focal Mechanisms.” Learn: Earthquake topics for Education. <http://earthquake.usgs.gov/learn/topics/beachball.php>.IRIS, 2012. “Focal Mechanisms Explained.” <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MomVOkyDdLo>. Merriam-Webster, 2014. “the Dictionary.”<http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/dilatation> California Institute of Technology, 2014. “San Jacinto Fault Zone.” <http://www.data.scec.org/significant/sanjacinto.html> Springer Link, 2011. “Earthquake, Focal Mechanism.”<http://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1007%2F978-90-481-8702-7_158/fulltext.html>  openSHA, 1980. “Strike, Dip, and Rake (focal Mechanism).” <http://www.opensha.org/glossary-strikeDipRake> Calvin College. “Eachquakes: A World in Motion. Recent Quakes, Calvin Seismograph…”<http://www.calvin.edu/academic/geology/seismology/>

Page 27: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

ON WHICH FAULTS HAVE MAJOR EARTHQUAKES OCCURRED SINCE THE 1906 SAN FRANCISCO EARTHQUAKE?

Page 28: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

What is a Major Earthquake?

Magnitude Intensity

Richter Magnitude

Moment Magnitude

measures the energy released at the source of the earthquake and it is determined from measurements on seismographs.

takes the amplitude and distances of seismograms and is known to underestimate the size of large quakes.

measures the strength of shaking produced by the earthquake at a certain location and it is evaluated from effects on people, human structures, and the natural environment.

Magnitude is related to the physical parameters that uses seismic moment (Mo), the force needed to generate the recorded waves, determines the energy released by the quake. MW = 2/3 log10(MO) - 10.7

Page 29: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

What is a Major Earthquake?

Page 30: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

San Francisco Earthquake 1906

5:12 AM - April 18, 1906Magnitude: 7.8Intensity: maximum intensity of XI was based on geologic effects, but the highest intensity based on damage was IX.

• Rupturing about 430 km or more to the northernmost of the San Andreas Fault

• The earthquake was felt from southern Oregon to south of Los Angeles and inland as far as central Nevada.

• Due to water pipe breakage, the water was shut off. Since there was no water, the fire got set off causing a large part of San Francisco to burn down.

Page 31: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

Major Earthquakes since 1906

Date Earthquake Magnitude Faults 18 April 1906

San Francisco

ML 7.8 San Andreas

4 Nov. 1927

Offshore Lompoc

ML 7.1 Hosgri

21 July 1952

Kern County Mw 7.5 White Wolf

28 June 1992

Landers Mw 7.3 Johnson Valley,

Kickapoo, Homestead Valley, Emerson, and Camp

Rock 18 Oct. 1999

Hector Mine Mw 7.1 Hector Mine (Lavic

Lake) and Bullion

(Pisgah)

Page 32: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

Faults Involved . . . Type of Fault Earthquak

e Fault Names

Right-Lateral Strike Slip

Landers

Johnson Valley, Landers,

Homestead Valley,

Emerson, and Camp Rock

faults

Hector Mine

Lavic Lake and Bullion

Reverse with some Left-Lateral

Kern County White Wolf

Reverse and Thrust Lompoc

Hosgri

Page 33: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

Works Cited“Historical Earthquakes: San Francisco 1906.” USGS: Earthquake Hazards Program. 1 November 2012. Web.

16 June 2014. <http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/states/events/1906_04_18.php>.

“Hector Mine Earthquake.” Southern California Earthquake Data Center. Caltech, 31 January 2013. Web.

16 June 2014. <http://www.data.scec.org/significant/hectormine1999.html>.

“Kern County Earthquake.” Southern California Earthquake Data Center. Caltech, 31 January 2013. Web.

16 June 2014. <http://www.data.scec.org/significant/kern1952.html>.

“Lompoc Earthquake.” Southern California Earthquake Data Center. Caltech, 31 January 2013. Web. 16 June 2014. <http://www.data.scec.org/significant/lompoc1927.html>. “Landers Earthquake.” Southern California Earthquake Data Center. Caltech, 31 January 2013. Web.

16 June 2014. <http://www.data.scec.org/significant/landers1992.html>.

“Measuring the Size of an Earthquake.” USGS: Earthquake Hazards Program. 1 November 2012. Web.

16 June 2014. <http://earthquake.usgs.gov/learn/topics/measure.php>.

Zoback, Mary Lou. “The 1906 Earthquake and a Century of Progress in Understanding Earthquakes and

their Hazards.” GSA Today April/May. 2006: 1-11. Print.

Page 34: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

What is “Drop, Cover and

Hold on” and who is

participating?

Page 35: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

ShakeOut: “Drop, Cover, and Hold On.”

11 million participants (US & other countries) 7,200,000 from California 830,000 from Japan

Who is Participating? K-12 School Districts Colleges and Universities Businesses Government Institutions

Page 36: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

What is “Drop, Cover, and Hold on?”

Actions to take during an earthquake: DROP to the ground COVER by getting under a sturdy desk or

table HOLD ON to it until the shaking stops

Page 37: SCEC VDO  Mini Grand Challenge 2014  Visualizing Earthquake Country

Works Cited Shakeout – Drop, Cover, and Hold On:

http://www.shakeout.org/dropcoverholdon/