ELTS8-2ndEd - ch06 - The Faults From Within Earth
ELTS8-2ndEd - ch06 - The Faults From Within Earth
ELTS8-2ndEd - ch06 - The Faults From Within Earth
Fault
• a fracture or break in Earth’s crust where earthquakes
are most likely to occur repeatedly
• forms when the rocks of the crust are compressed or
stretched by plate movement
Fault zones
• many faults spread over a wide area
Fracture to Fault
• fractures may be faults that are just beginning to form
• A fracture can only be considered a fault if evidence of
movement can be seen.
Lesson 6.2
Stress
-force applied to rocks
dip
• fault moves or “slips” along the dip
• the hanging wall moved
downward with respect to
Normal the footwall along the dip
Faults direction
• formed when rocks are
stretched
Types of
Dip-Slip Fault
• the hanging wall moves
up with respect to the
Reverse footwall
Faults
• formed when rocks are
compressed
Thrust Faults
• special type of reverse faults
• the angle of the dip is less than 45°
• fault plane has a smaller dip angle compared to
reverse faults
Strike-Slip Fault
• formed when rocks are made to shear and slip in the
direction of the strike
• movement is always horizontal
Strike
• the line of intersection between the horizon and a
planar surface
Strike-slip Faults
Faults
PHIVOLCS
• Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology
• spearheads the study of active faults in the country
Fault Systems in the Philippines
1. Philippine Fault Zone
3. Lubang Fault
When the
rocks break
Plate
along a fault,
movements Elastic energy Seismic Earthquake is
the stored
cause the is stored in energy passes the arrival of
elastic energy
rocks of the the rocks through rocks seismic waves
is released as
plates to be when plates as seismic from deep
a kinetic
stretched or move wave within Earth
energy called
compressed
seismic
energy.
Lesson 6.6
Anatomy of an Earthquake
Focus/Hypocenter
• point where the breaking of the rocks first starts and
seismic energy is released
Fault Plane
• breaking surface underground, where movement takes
place
Fault Line
• edge of the fault plane that
shows how much
movement has taken place
Fault Scarp
• fault plane is exposed
above ground
Epicenter
• the point on Earth’s surface directly
above the focus
Recording Earthquakes
Seismograph
• machine used in recording earthquakes
Intensity Magnitude
tells how much a describes the total
certain area was amount of energy
shaken by an that was released
earthquake by the earthquake
at the focus.
Crust
• solid rock layer that
makes up the outermost
shell of Earth
Mantle
• lies beneath the crust and is the thickest layer
• upper mantle: made of denser, solid but plastic
(malleable) rock
• lower mantle: composed of even denser, solid, and
rigid rock
Outer core
• the only liquid layer that flows chaotically
Inner core
• densest layer composed of solid iron with some
amount of nickel
How do we Seismologists use earthquakes to “see” inside Earth.
get
information Seismic energy radiates from the focus as seismic waves
from Earth’s
interior? Body waves are seismic waves that pass through Earth’s
interior
• Gutenberg discontinuity,
⁻ boundary between the solid lower mantle and the
liquid outer core
Lesson 6.10
Earthquake Preparedness