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Top : Articles : Earthquake
One of the most frightening and destructive phenomena of nature is
earthquake. An earthquake is a series of violent vibrations on the earth's
surface caused by the generation of seismic waves due to sudden rupture
within the earth during release of accumulated strain energy.
The location where the earthquake starts is called hypocenter. The location
above it is called epicenter. The epicenter is the point on the surface
where the earthquake is the strongest.
Causes
- Earthquakes occur due to sudden, violent shifting of massive rocks called
tectonic plates, which are the earth's outermost layer of crust and upper
mantle. Due to the heating and cooling of the rock below these plates,
convection occurs. This results in the movement in the overlying plates.
This releases stress that accumulates along faults. The brittle outer part
of the Earth crust fractures along faults. A fault is a deep crack that
marks the boundary between two of these plates. Most earthquakes happen near
the boundaries of tectonic plates, both where the plates spread apart and
grind together. 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. These
vibrations cause the entire planet to quiver.
- Volcanic eruptions, rockfalls, landslides, and explosions can also cause a
quake.
- Nuclear explosions under the ground can create waves that are very similar
to natural seismic waves.
Where do earthquake occur?
The Earth's major earthquakes occur mainly in belts coinciding with the
margins of tectonic plates. The most important earthquake belt is:
- The Circum-Pacific Belt, which affects many populated coastal regions
around the Pacific Ocean—as, for example, those of New Zealand, New Guinea,
Japan, the Aleutian Islands, Alaska, and the western coasts of North and
South America.
- The Alpide Belt, passes through the Mediterranean region eastward through
Asia and joins the Circum-Pacific Belt in the East Indies. The energy
released in earthquakes from this belt is about 15 percent of the world
total.
There also are striking connected belts of seismic activity, mainly along
oceanic ridges including those in the Arctic Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean, and
the western Indian Ocean.
Classification of earthquakes
Magnitude of the earthquake is measured on the basis of ground motion
recorded by an instrument and is related with the amount of energy released
by an earthquake and expressed in Richter scale.
The Richter scale is used to measure the amount of energy released by the
earthquake. The severity of an earthquake runs from 0 to 9 on this scale.
- Slight Magnitude up to 4.9 on the Richter scale.
- Moderate Magnitude 5.0 to 6.9
- Great Magnitude 7.0 to 7.9
- Violent Magnitude 8.0 and more
But Richter magnitude is only accurate for earthquakes up to about 500
kilometers. Seismologists have developed a system called "moment magnitude,"
which takes into account the actual area of fault ruptured and gives a more
consistent measure of earthquake size across the spectrum.
The study of earthquakes is called seismology. The earthquake generates
seismic waves, which can be recorded on a sensitive instrument called a
seismograph. The record of ground shaking recorded by the seismograph is
called a seismogram.
Damage Caused by Earthquakes
- The effects of an earthquake are strongest in a broad zone surrounding the
epicenter.
- Earthquake vibrations last longer and are of greater wave amplitudes in
unconsolidated surface material, such as poorly compacted fill or river
deposits; bedrock areas receive fewer effects.
- The worst damage occurs in densely populated urban areas where structures
are not built to withstand intense shaking.
- The waves can produce destructive vibrations in buildings and break water
and gas lines, starting uncontrollable fires.
- An earthquake can trigger mud slides, which slip down mountain slopes and
can bury habitations below.
- A submarine earthquake can cause a tsunami, a series of damaging waves
that ripple outward from the earthquake epicenter and inundate coastal
cities.
Prevention Is Better Than Cure
Earthquake can cause massive damage and destruction. Earthquakes strike
suddenly, violently, and without warning at any time of the day or night. If
an earthquake occurs in a populated area, it may cause many deaths and
injuries and extensive property damage. Scientists are continuously thinking
of ways to try and reduce earthquake power.
Although there are no guarantees of safety during an earthquake, identifying
potential hazards ahead of time and advance planning can save lives and
significantly reduce injuries and property damage.
The risks that earthquakes pose to society, including death, injury, and
economic loss, can be greatly reduced by
- Better planning, construction, and mitigation practices before
earthquakes happen.
- Providing critical and timely information to improve response after they
occur.
In earthquake-prone areas, populated areas need to take measures to protect
themselves against the effects of earthquakes so as to reduce deaths and
losses.
- Earthquake drills should be conducted frequently in earthquake-prone
settlements, so that people would be familiarized with emergency procedures
during an actual earthquake, reducing death tolls.
- Adequate shelters, medicine and food should also be provided in the
settlement to handle after affects of the earthquake.
- Disaster plans and civil defense units should also be well maintained to
ensure efficient rescue actions after a disaster strikes.
- Seismographs, machines that can detect earthquakes, should be utilized to
predict potential earthquakes, alerting authorities to evacuate the people
as soon as an earthquake threat is reported.
- Tsunamis warning systems are also important in coastal areas prone to
earthquake in order to reduce great loss of life and damage to property when
the waves roll in.
- The earthquake risk can be reduced by microzonation, which is the
identification of separate individual areas having different potentials for
hazardous earthquake effects.
- Architects are also designing earthquake-proof buildings, constructing on
rock instead of gravel, or on soft sand or clay. Large structures are made
with strong frameworks of steel or reinforced concrete, so that the frame
stands firm even if the ground is shaking. The pyramid-shaped Transamerica
building in San Francisco was designed in this fashion.
(Added/Updated: 8-Nov-2007 Rating: 0 Votes: 0)
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