РефератыИностранный языкEaEarthquakes Essay Research Paper Earthquakes have plagued

Earthquakes Essay Research Paper Earthquakes have plagued

Earthquakes Essay, Research Paper


Earthquakes have plagued our lives for as long as people have inhabited the earth. These


dangerous acts of the earth have been the cause of many deaths in the past century. So


what can be done about these violent eruptions that take place nearly with out warning?


Predicting an earthquake until now has almost been technologically impossible. With


improvements in technology, lives have been saved and many more will. All that remains is


to research what takes place before, during, and after an earthquake. This has been done


for years to the point now that a successful earthquake prediction was made and was


accurate.


Earthquake, vibrations produced in the earth’s crust when rocks in which elastic


strain has been building up suddenly rupture, and then rebound.The vibrations can range


from barely noticeable to catastrophically destructive. Six kinds of shock waves are


generated in the process. Two are classified as body waves?that is, they travel through


the earth’s interior?and the other four are surface waves. The waves are further


differentiated by the kinds of motions they impart to rock particles. Primary or


compressional waves (P waves) send particles oscillating back and forth in the same


direction as the waves are traveling, whereas secondary or transverse shear waves (S


waves) impart vibrations perpendicular to their direction of travel. P waves always travel


at higher velocities than S waves, so whenever an earthquake occurs, P waves are the first


to arrive and to be recorded at geophysical research stations worldwide.


Earthquake waves were observed in this and other ways for centuries, but more


scientific theories as to the causes of quakes were not proposed until modern times. One


such concept was advanced in 1859 by the Irish engineer Robert Mallet. Perhaps drawing


on his knowledge of the strength and behavior of construction materials subjected to


strain, Mallet proposed that earthquakes occurred either by sudden flexure and constraint


of the elastic materials forming a portion of the earth’s crust or by their giving way and


becoming fractured.


Later, in the 1870s, the English geologist John Milne devised a forerunner of today’s


earthquake-recording device, or seismograph. A simple pendulum and needle suspended


above a smoked-glass plate, it was the first instrument to allow discrimination of primary


and secondary earthquake waves. The modern seismograph was invented in the early 20th


century by the Russian seismologist Prince Boris Golitzyn. His device, using a magnetic


pendulum suspended between the poles of an magnet. Most tectonic quakes occur at the


boundaries of these plates, in zones where one plate slides past another?as at the San


Andreas Fault in California, North America’s most quake-prone area?or is subducted


(slides beneath the other plate). Subduction-zone quakes account for nearly half of the


world’s destructive seismic events and 75 percent of the earth’s seismic energy. They are


concentrated along the so-called Ring of Fire, a narrow band about 38,600 km long, that


coincides with the margins

of the Pacific Ocean.


Seismologists have devised two scales of measurement to enable them to describe


earthquakes quantitatively. ?One is the Richter scale?named after the American


seismologist Charles Francis Richter?which measures the energy released at the focus of


a quake. It is a logarithmic scale that runs from 1 to 9; a magnitude 7 quake is 10 times


more powerful than a magnitude 6 quake, 100 times more powerful than a magnitude 5


quake, 1000 times more powerful than a magnitude 4 quake, and so on.


The other scale, introduced at the turn of the 20th century by the Italian


seismologist Giuseppe Mercalli, measures the intensity of shaking with gradations from I


to XII. Because seismic surface effects diminish with distance from the focus of the


quake, the Mercalli rating assigned to the quake depends on the site of the measurement.


Intensity I on this scale is defined as an event felt by very few people, whereas intensity


XII is assigned to a catastrophic event that causes total destruction. Events of intensities II


to III are roughly equivalent to quakes of magnitude 3 to 4 on the Richter scale, and XI to


XII on the Mercalli scale can be correlated with magnitudes 8 to 9 on the Richter scale.


Attempts at predicting when and where earthquakes will occur have met with some


success in recent years. At present, China, Japan, Russia, and the U.S. are the countries


most actively supporting such research. In 1975 the Chinese predicted the magnitude 7.3


quake at Haicheng, evacuating 90,000 residents only two days before the quake destroyed


or damaged 90 percent of the city’s buildings. One of the clues that led to this prediction


was a chain of low-magnitude tremors, called foreshocks, that had begun about five years


earlier in the area. Other potential clues being investigated are tilting or bulging of the


land surface and changes in the earth’s magnetic field, in the water levels of wells, and


even in animal behavior. A new method under study in the U.S. involves measuring the


buildup of stress in the crust of the earth. On the basis of such measurements the U.S.


Geological Survey, in April 1985, predicted that an earthquake of magnitude 5.5 to 6


would occur on the San Andreas fault, near Parkfield, California, sometime before 1993.


Many unofficial predictions of earthquakes have also been made. In 1990 a zoologist, Dr.


Iben Browning, warned that a major quake would occur along the New Madrid fault


before the end of the year. Like most predictions of this type, it proved to be wrong.


Groundwater has also played an important part in earthquake predictions. A peak in radon


in the groundwater at Kobe, Japan 9 days before the 7.2 earthquake cause quite a stir.


Radon levels peaked 9 days before the quake, then fell below the normal levels 5 days


before it hit.


The whole idea behind earthquake predicting is to save lives. With the


improvement in technology, lives have been saved. New ideas and equipment is starting to


prove to be very helpful in predicting were and when an earthquake will strike. The time


and research put into earthquake prediction.


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