Earthquakes. Dr. Mark van der Meijde INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR GEO-INFORMATION SCIENCE AND EARTH OBSERVATION

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Earthquakes Dr. Mark van der Meijde vandermeijde@itc.nl INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR GEO-INFORMATION SCIENCE AND EARTH OBSERVATION

Topics to handle Theory of earthquakes Mechanism Strength Measurements Earthquake catalogs Magnitude-frequency relationships completeness 2

Origin of earthquakes INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR GEO-INFORMATION SCIENCE AND EARTH OBSERVATION

Earth processes 4

Reconstruction of plate motion Advanced GIS analysis of many various parameters (e.g. magnetics, geology, seismology, GPS, etc) results in simulation of tectonic processes in the last 200 Ma Gondwana animation Source: Colin Reeves, ITC 5

Plate tectonics Divergent boundaries Where new crust is generated as the plates pull away from each other. Convergent boundaries Where crust is destroyed as one plate dives under another 1. Oceanic-Continental subduction zone 2. Oceanic-Oceanic subduction zone 3. Continent-Continent collision zone Transform boundaries Where crust is neither produced nor destroyed as the plates slide horizontally past each other 6

Three Types of Faults Strike-Slip Sli Thrust Normal Source: USGS 7

Earthquake waves and recordings INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR GEO-INFORMATION SCIENCE AND EARTH OBSERVATION

Origin of seismic signal 9

Schematic ray paths 10

Seismographs Records as a function of time, the motion of the earth s surface due to seismic waves Actual record is called: Seismogram 11

Seismic waves Body waves P-Waves Primary, Compressional, Longitudinal S-Wave Secondary, Shear, Transverse Surface waves Love wave Similar to S-waves Rayleigh wave Surface ripples 12

13

Body waves (P-wave) P or Primary Waves- Also known as Compressional waves Motion of matter parallel to the direction of wave propagation. Fastest type of wave. P waves travel through all types of matter (gas, liquid, id solid) 14

Body waves (S-wave) Motion of matter in a direction perpendicular to the direction of wave propagation. S waves are slower than P waves. They are the second fastest type of wave. They tend to arrive second at the station. The velocity of S waves is controlled by how the material through which wave is traveling responds to shear forces. It also depends on the density of the material. S waves only travel through solids 15

Seismic waves 16

Body waves (P-wave) 17

Body waves (S-wave) 18

Surface waves Some body waves travel up from the earthquake hypocenter (focus) and spread towards the surface where they cause the Earth's surface to vibrate. This vibration generates surface waves which travel within the upper few kilometers of the Earth's crust. Slowest of all seismic waves. Surface waves only travel through h solids 19

Seismic waves 20

Surface waves (Rayleigh) 21

Surface waves (Love) 22

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Earthquake Sumatra 24

Earthquake magnitude INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR GEO-INFORMATION SCIENCE AND EARTH OBSERVATION

Magnitude of an earthquake 2 ways of measuring strength of an earthquake: Magnitude: amount of energy released - "Small earthquakes make small waves, big earthquakes make big waves" Intensity: amount of damage, reaction of people Magnitude scales: Local magnitude scale (M L ) Surface wave magnitude scale (M s ) Body wave magnitude scale (M b ) Moment magnitude scale (M w ) 26

Local Magnitude (M L ) The Richter magnitude scale (1958) Developed for shallow and local eq s M L =log A + distance correction factor M L = local or Richter magnitude scale A = Amplitude, in millimeters, measured directly from the paper record of the Wood-Anderson seismometer Log-scale: 10-time increase in amplitude (energy) 1 scale level up 27

Richter scale: M L =log A + 3log(8Δt) 2.92 A = amplitude in mm Δt = time difference between P and S arrival in sec 28

Surface Wave Magnitude (M S ) Based on the amplitude of surface waves having a period of 20 sec (0.05 0 Hz) Ms = Log A + 1.66 Log Δ + 3.3 Δ = epicentral distance (in degrees) A = max ground displacement (μm) independent of seismograph type Bath, 1966 Moderate to large earthquakes Shallow focal depth (< 70 km) Distance > 1000 km from epicentre 29

Body wave magnitude (M B ) Based on the P-wave amplitude having a seismic-wave period between 0.1 and 3.0 sec Distance > 5 degrees from epicentre Gutenberg and Richter, 1956 30

Moment magnitude (M W ) moment magnitude is based on very long period seismic signals not a good measure for seismic hazards. Low frequency seismic signals are not necessarily the most destructive (a frequency of zero will actually cause no damage.). For large earthquakes therefore Mw is not a good measure since it neglects the high frequency content (and possible sub-ruptures) 31

Intensity of an earthquake Based on: Observations of damaged structures Presence of secondary effects Degree to which quake was felt by individuals Easy to determine in urban area, difficult in rural area Most commonly used: Modified Mercalli Intensity scale (MMI) MSK-64 (Medvedev-Sponheuer-Karnik) d EMS-98(European Macroseismic Scale) 32

MMI Intensity I Reaction of people, level of damage People do not feel any Earth movement. II A few people might notice movement if they are at rest and/or on the upper floors of tall buildings. III Many people indoors feel movement. Hanging objects swing back and forth. People outdoors might not realize that an earthquake is occurring. IV V Most people indoors feel movement. Hanging objects swing. Dishes, windows, and doors rattle. The earthquake feels like a heavy truck hitting the walls. A few people outdoors may feel movement. Parked cars rock. Almost everyone feels movement. Sleeping people are awakened. Doors swing open or close. Dishes are broken. Pictures on the wall move. Small objects move or are turned over. Trees might shake. Liquids might spill out of open containers. VI Everyone feels movement. People have trouble walking. Objects fall from shelves. Pictures fall off walls. Furniture moves. Plaster in walls might crack. Trees and bushes shake. Damage is slight in poorly built buildings. No structural damage. VII VIII IX X People have difficulty standing. Drivers feel their cars shaking. Some furniture breaks. Loose bricks fall from buildings. Damage is slight to moderate in well-built buildings; considerable in poorly built buildings. Drivers have trouble steering. Houses that are not bolted down might shift on their foundations. Tall structures such as towers and chimneys might twist and fall. Well-built buildings suffer slight damage. Poorly built structures suffer severe damage. Tree branches break. Hillsides might crack if the ground is wet. Water levels in wells might change. Well-built buildings suffer considerable damage. Houses that are not bolted down move off their foundations. Some underground pipes are broken. The ground cracks. Reservoirs suffer serious damage. Most buildings and their foundations are destroyed. Some bridges are destroyed. Dams are seriously damaged. Large landslides occur. Water is thrown on the banks of canals, rivers, lakes. The ground cracks in large areas. Railroad tracks are bent slightly. XI XII Most buildings collapse. Some bridges are destroyed. Large cracks appear in the ground. Underground pipelines are destroyed. Railroad tracks are badly bent. Almost everything is destroyed. Objects are thrown into the air. The ground moves in waves or ripples. Large amounts of rock may move. 33

EMS intensity Definition Description of typical observed effects (abstracted) I Not felt Not felt. II Scarcely felt Felt only by very few individual people at rest in houses. III Weak Felt indoors by a few people. People at rest feel a swaying or light trembling. IV Largely observed Felt indoors by many people, outdoors by very few. A few people are awakened. Windows, doors and dishes rattle. V Strong Felt indoors by most, outdoors by few. Many sleeping people awake. A few are frightened. Buildings tremble throughout. Hanging objects swing considerably. Small objects are shifted. Doors and windows swing open or shut. VI Slightly Many ypeople p are frightened and run outdoors. Some objects fall. Many houses suffer slight non- damaging structural damage like hair-line cracks and fall of small pieces of plaster. VII Damaging Most people are frightened and run outdoors. Furniture is shifted and objects fall from shelves in large numbers. Many well built ordinary buildings suffer moderate damage: small cracks in walls, fall of plaster, parts of chimneys fall down; older buildings may show large cracks in walls and failure of fill-in walls. VIII Heavily damaging Many people find it difficult to stand. Many houses have large cracks in walls. A few well built ordinary buildings show serious failure of walls, while weak older structures may collapse. IX Destructive General panic. Many weak constructions collapse. Even well built ordinary buildings show very heavy damage: serious failure of walls and partial structural failure. X Very destructive Many ordinary well built buildings collapse. XI Devastating Most ordinary well built buildings collapse, even some with good earthquake resistant design are destroyed. XII Completely devastating Almost all buildings are destroyed. 34

Earthquake intensity vs damage 35

Earthquake catalogs and statistics INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR GEO-INFORMATION SCIENCE AND EARTH OBSERVATION

Bigger Faults Make Bigger Earthquakes 1000 Kilomet ters100 10 1 5.5 6 6.5 7 7.5 Magnitude 8 Source: USGS 37

Bigger Earthquakes Last a Longer Time 100 econds Se 10 1 5.5 6 6.5 7 7.5 8 Magnitude Source: USGS 38

Earthquake energy vs ground motion This table shows that a M=7.2 earthquake produces 10 times more ground motion than a M=6.2 earthquake but releases 32 times more energy. e 39

Introduction What is frequency? The rate at which something happens or is repeated The fact of something happening often The rate at which a waves vibrates 40

Introduction Frequency analysis: Analysis of the rate at which something happens or is repeated Unfortunately, this is not well defined: Has variations over time Is varying spatially Can be very irregular in occurrence Incomplete over total range of occurences (small occurences often go undetected) 41

Introduction But what are we studying? What is the something that is occurring? In case of earthquakes it could be: 1) Just any earthquake 2) Only earthquakes above a certain threshold 3) Only earthquakes that cause damage 4) Only earthquakes due to which people died? 5) Type of earthquakes 6) Depth range of earthquakes 42

Earthquake occurence all quakes Per day 0.5 4 36 360 (every 4 minutes.) 3600 (every 24 seconds.) 43

Global seismicity over 30 years 44

45

46

Earthquake occurence 10 yr period? 47

Earthquake statistics 48

Earthquake statistics 49

Earthquake statistics 50

Earthquake statistics 51

Frequency analysis Summarizing: All different criteria play a role in determining frequency of earthquakes. Many different categories can be made all with their own specific frequency and characteristics! This makes frequency analysis a difficult study. Assumptions and definitions iti need to be clear before you start such a study! 52

Frequency-magnitude log N = a b M Incomplete Assumptions to be made N (m>m) log N M 0 M max magnitude M Seismicity 53

Frequency magnitude plot 54

Frequency-magnitude 55

Frequency-magnitude Frequency vs. magnitude relations are the most common way to analyse earthquake occurences. But this interpretation is varying: Variations per region Variations over time 56

Exercise frequency analysis You will do an exercise on earthquake catalogues for the whole world, California and Honduras. Create frequency-magnitude relationships for the different catalogs. Observe the variations and the impact of small and large events on the derived relationships. 57