Earthquake are sudden movements of the Earth, caused by the
abrupt release of strain that has accumulated over a long time.
For hundreds of millions of years, the forces of plate
tectonics have shaped the Earth as the huge plates that form the Earth's
surface slowly move over, under, and past each other. Sometimes
the movement is gradual. At other times, the plates are locked
together, unable to release the accumulating energy. When the accumulated
energy grows strong enough, the plates break free. If the earthquake
occurs in a populated area, it may cause many deaths and injuries
and extensive property damage.
Causes:
An earthquake
is the vibration, sometimes violent, of the Earth's surface
that follows a release of energy in
the Earth's crust.
This energy can be generated by a sudden dislocation of segments
of the crust, by a volcanic
eruption,
or event by manmade explosions. Most destructive quakes, however,
are caused by dislocations
of the crust. The crust may first bend and then, when the stress
exceeds the strength of the rocks, break and "snap" to
a new position. In the process of breaking, vibrations called "seismic
waves" are generated. These waves travel outward from the
source of the earthquake along the surface and through the Earth
at varying speeds depending on the material through which they
move. Some of the vibrations are of high enough frequency to
be audible, while others are of very low frequency. These vibrations
cause the entire planet to quiver or ring like a bell or tuning
fork.
A fault is a fracture in the Earth's crust along which two blocks
of the crust have slipped with respect to each other. Faults
are divided into three main groups, depending on how they move.
Normal faults occur in response to pulling or tension; the overlying
block moves down the dip of the fault plane. Thrust (reverse)
faults occur in response to squeezing or compression; the overlying
block moves up the dip of the fault plane. Strike-slip (lateral)
faults occur in response to either type of stress; the blocks
move horizontally past one another. Most faulting along spreading
zones is normal, along subduction zones is thrust, and along
transform faults is strike-slip.
Geologists have found that earthquakes tend to reoccur along
faults, which reflect zones of weakness in the Earth's crust.
Even if a fault zone has recently experienced an earthquake,
however, there is no guarantee that all the stress has been relieved.
Another earthquake could still occur. In New Madrid, a great
earthquake was followed by a large aftershock within 6 hours
on December 6, 1811. Furthermore, relieving stress along one
part of the fault may increase stress in another part; the New
Madrid earthquakes in January and February 1812 may have resulted
from this phenomenon.
The focal depth of an earthquake is the depth from the Earth's
surface to the region where an earthquake's energy originates
(the focus). Earthquakes with focal depths from the surface to
about 70 kilometers (43.5 miles) are classified as shallow. Earthquakes
with focal depths from 70 to 300 kilometers (43.5 to 186 miles)
are classified as intermediate. The focus of deep earthquakes
may reach depths of more than 700 kilometers (435 miles). The
focuses of most earthquakes are concentrated in the crust and
upper mantle. The depth to the center of the Earth's core is
about 6,370 kilometers (3,960 miles), so event the deepest earthquakes
originate in relatively shallow parts of the Earth's interior.
The epicenter of an earthquake is the point on the Earth's surface
directly above the focus. The location of an earthquake is commonly
described by the geographic position of its epicenter and by
its focal depth.
Earthquakes
beneath the ocean floor sometimes generate immense sea waves
or tsunamis (Japan's dread "huge wave").
These waves travel across the ocean at speeds as great as 960
kilometers per hour (597 miles per hour) and may be 15 meters
(49 feet) high or higher by the time they reach the shore. During
the 1964 Alaskan earthquake, tsunamis engulfing coastal areas
caused most of the destruction at Kodiak, Cordova, and Seward
and caused severe damage along the west coast of North America,
particularly at Crescent City, California. Some waves raced across
the ocean to the coasts of Japan.
Liquefaction, which happens when loosely packed, water-logged
sediments lose their strength in response to strong shaking,
causes major damage during earthquakes. During the 1989 Loma
Prieta earthquake, liquefaction of the soils and debris used
to fill in a lagoon caused major subsidence, fracturing, and
horizontal sliding of the ground surface in the Marina district
in San Francisco.
Landslides triggered by earthquakes often cause more destruction
than the earthquakes themselves.
Occurence:
The Earth
is formed of several layers that have very different physical
and chemical properties. The outer layer, which averages
about 70 kilometers in thickness, consists of about a dozen large,
irregularly shaped plates that slide over, under and past each
other on top of the partly molten inner layer. Most earthquakes
occur at the boundaries where the plates meet. In fact, the locations
of earthquakes and the kinds of ruptures they produce help scientists
define the plate boundaries. There are three types of plate boundaries:
spreading centrer zones, transform faults, and subduction zones.
Spreading
Center Zones - molten rock
rises, pushing two plates apart and adding new material
at their edges. Most spreading zones are found in oceans; for
example,
the North American and Eurasian plates are spreading apart
along
the mid-Atlantic ridge. Spreading center zones usually
have earthquakes at shallow depths (within 30 kilometers
of
the surface).
Transform
faults - Found where plates slide past one another. An
example
of a transform-fault plate boundary is the San Andreas
fault, along the coast of California and northwestern Mexico.
Earthquakes
at transform faults tend to occur at shallow depths and
form fairly straight linear patterns.
Subduction
Zones - Found where one plate overrides, or subducts,
another, pushing it downward
into the mantle where it melts.
An example of a subduction-zone plate boundary is found
along the northwest coast of the United States, western
Canada, and
southern Alaska and the Aleutian Islands. Subduction
zones
are
characterized by deep-ocean trenches, shallow to deep
earthquakes, and mountain ranges containing active volcanoes.
Earthquakes can also occur within plates, although plate-boundary
earthquakes are much more common. Less than 10 percent of all
earthquakes occur within plate interiors. As plates continue
to move and plate boundaries change over geologic time, weakened
boundary regions become part of the interiors of the plates.
These zones of weakness within the continents can cause earthquakes
in response to stresses that originate at the edges of the plate
or in the deeper crust.