Geohazards Lecture For EV 200
Geohazards Lecture For EV 200
Geohazards Lecture For EV 200
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Three Types of Stress
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Earth’s Interior
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Earth’s
Structure
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Structure of the Earth
Earth’s Structure
Crust –
Less dense layer
Lithosphere < 15 km, brittle rigid, broken into
tectonic plates
Mantle
~2,900 km (1,800 mi) thick
Rocky, iron rich silicates, upper layer is
asthenosphere
Silicates nearer to melting point; usual source of
magma
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Earth’s Interior
Scientists hypothesize inner and outer core
are iron-nickel alloy
Outer core
Metallic liquid
Inner core
Metallic solid
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Earth’s Magnetic Field
Inner core is solid, rotates faster than
planet
Electrically charged metallic ions in outer
core circulate
Generates magnetic field
Used for magnetic north in compasses
Blocks some solar radiation
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Earth’s Magnetic Field
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Earth’s Internal Heat
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Earth’s
Internal
Heat
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Convection of Mantle
Сross section through the Earth showing the
convection cells of the mantle.
Ridge push
happens at spreading
centers where plates
are moving apart.
Slab pull happens
at subduction zones
where one plate is
pulled down into the
mantle.
Plate Motion
- Movements deep within the Earth
-carry heat from the hot interior to the cooler surface
- the plates to move very slowly on the surface, about 2
inches per year.
Subduction zones
→ plates crash into
each other;
spreading ridges →
plates pull away
from each other;
large faults →
plates slide past each
other.
Continental Drift
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Continental Drift, Sea-Floor Spreading, and
Plate Tectonics
Alfred Wegener, a German
meteorologist, proposed the
continental drift hypothesis
(between 1919-1929) to explain:
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Continental Drift
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Developing Theory of Plate Tectonics
Mapping ocean floor began in 1855 by U.S. Navy
WW1 and sonar
Ocean
Ocean trenches as deep as 35,000 ft
Polar wandering
Moving poles and continents supported data
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Mapping the Ocean Floor
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Magnetic Studies
Igneous basalts contain iron mineral
magnetite (Fe3O4)
Magnetite is naturally magnetic
Atoms orient parallel to Earth’s magnetic
field when rock cools
Field of paleomagnetism studies changes
in magnetic poles over geologic time
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Magnetic Reversal
Sea Floor Spreading
Mid oceanic ridges – magma
erupts forming new ocean
crust
Rocks older farther away
from ridge crests
1968 – drilling and dating
basalts
Oldest part of sea floor 200
million yrs old
Atlantic basin growing, crust
material destroyed in trenches
in Pacific basin
Earthquakes
Earthquake – release of energy that occurs
when rocks are deformed past their elastic
limit causing a rupture
Energy travels out in seismic waves
Epicenter – point on the surface that
directly overlies point where rocks rupture
1960s – global network of seismic recording
stations
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Earthquake Locations
Earthquake Locations
Epicenters along Mid Atlantic Ridge –
magma rises up, buckles crust forming
ridge
Epicenters coincide with continental
mountain ranges
Subduction occurs when plate is forced
downward into mantle; associated with
volcanic activity at ocean trenches
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Last Piece of Evidence for
Continental Drift
Magnetite rocks form/cool, atoms orient to
magnetic north pole
Throughout geologic time, rocks orient to
different location – “polar wandering”
Different continents had different paths
Paleomagnetic and sea floor spreading
studies prove continents were moving no
the N. pole
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Polar
Wandering
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Plate Tectonics and Earth’s Systems
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Plate Tectonics and Earth’s Systems
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Plate Boundaries
Movement generates compression, tension
or shear
3 Types of Boundaries
1. Divergent
2. Convergent
3. Transform
See Figure 4.19 Page 107
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Plate Boundaries
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Movement
of Plates
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Surface Features & Plate Boundaries
Convergent
Oceanic-oceanic island arc; one plates undergoes subduction; may
produce an island arc
Oceanic-continental - continental arc formed; oceanic plate
undergoes subduction; volcanic activity
Andes Mountains along S. America’s west coast
Himalayas in Asia
Alps in Europe
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Surface Features & Plate Boundaries
Divergent
Ocean ridges
Rift valleys; may fill in with water
Transform – plates “side swipe” each other; shear
forces; most in ocean plates; no subduction
San Andreas fault
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Divergent Plate Boundaries
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Convergent Plate Boundaries
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Transform Plate Boundary
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East African Rift Valley
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East African Rift Valley
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Future of African Continent?
http://www.pmfias.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/East-African-Rift-Valley-break-up.jpg
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Plate Boundaries and People
Natural hazards
Earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, landslides
Natural resources; minerals form under
specific geologic conditions
Climate – oceans transfer heat, mountain
ranges interrupt air masses; volcanic ash
Development of life
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LECTURE 2
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ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE (EV 200)
Ridge push
happens at spreading
centers where plates
are moving apart.
Slab pull happens
at subduction zones
where one plate is
pulled down into the
mantle.
Plate Motion
- Movements deep within the Earth
-carry heat from the hot interior to the cooler surface
- the plates to move very slowly on the surface, about 2
inches per year.
Subduction zones
→ plates crash into
each other;
spreading ridges →
plates pull away
from each other;
large faults →
plates slide past each
other.
Earthquakes
Earthquake – release of energy that occurs
when rocks are deformed past their elastic
limit causing a rupture
Energy travels out in seismic waves
Epicenter – point on the surface that
directly overlies point where rocks rupture
1960s – global network of seismic recording
stations
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volcanic and landslides
eruptions
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EARTHQUAKES
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In its most general sense, the word
earthquake is used to describe any seismic
event — whether natural or caused by
humans — that generates seismic waves.
•Earthquakes are caused mostly by rupture of
geological faults, but also by other events
such as volcanic activity, landslides, mine
blasts, and nuclear tests.
•An earthquake’s point of initial rupture is
called its focus or hypocenter.
•The epicenter is the point at ground level
directly above the hypocenter.
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What causes Earthquakes
and where do they happen?
The earth has four major layers: the inner core, outer core, mantle
and crust. The crust and the top of the mantle make up a thin skin on
the surface of our planet. But this skin is not all in one piece – it is
made up of many pieces like a puzzle covering the surface of the
earth.
•Not only that, but these puzzle pieces keep slowly moving around,
sliding past one another and bumping into each other.
•We call these puzzle pieces tectonic plates, and the edges of the
plates are called the plate boundaries. The plate boundaries are made
up of many faults, and most of the earthquakes around the world
occur on these faults.
•Since the edges of the plates are rough, they get stuck while the rest
of the plate keeps moving. Finally, when the plate has moved far
enough, the edges unstick on one of the faults and there is an 4-63
earthquake.
Earthquakes results from
movement of tectonic plates
past each other, causing
stress.
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How are Earthquakes
recorded & detected?
• When the Earth trembles, earthquakes spread energy in
the form of seismic waves. A seismograph is the primary
earthquake measuring instrument.
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How Do I Locate That
Earthquake's Epicenter?
By looking at the amount of time between the P and S wave on a
seismogram recorded on a seismograph, scientists can tell how far
away the earthquake was from that location.
Dr Cassy Mtelela
How are Earthquakes Measured?
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The Richter Scale
• From 1935 until 1970, the earthquake magnitude scale was
the Richter scale, a mathematical formula invented by
Caltech seismologist Charles Richter to compare quake
sizes.
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Earthquake Magnitude
Classes
Earthquakes are also classified in categories ranging from
minor to great, depending on their magnitude.
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Earthquake Intensity
A second way earthquakes are measured is by their intensity.
Earthquake Intensity measurement is an on-the-ground
description.
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The Modified Mercalli Scale
• The Modified Mercalli (MM) Intensity Scale is used in the
United States. Based on Giuseppe Mercalli's Mercalli
intensity scale of 1902, the modified 1931 scale is
composed of increasing levels of intensity that range from
observable quake impacts from light shaking to catastrophic
destruction.
•
• Intensity is reported by Roman numerals.
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Can scientists predict
Earthquakes?
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Effects of earthquakes
1. Shaking and ground rupture
Shaking and ground rupture are the main effects created by earthquakes,
principally resulting in more or less severe damage to buildings and
other rigid structures. The severity of the local effects depends on the
complex combination of the earthquake magnitude, the distance from
the epicenter, and the local geological and geomorphological
conditions, which may amplify or reduce wave propagation.
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Earthquakes
Destruction after a
volcanic induced
earthquake in Japan
3. Fires
Earthquakes can cause fires by damaging electrical power or gas lines. In
the event of water mains rupturing and a loss of pressure, it may also
become difficult to stop the spread of a fire once it has started. For example,
more deaths in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake were caused by fire than
by the earthquake itself
4. Soil liquefaction
Soil liquefaction occurs when, because of the shaking, water-saturated
granular material (such as sand) temporarily loses its strength and
transforms from a solid to a liquid. Soil liquefaction may cause rigid
structures, like buildings and bridges, to tilt or sink into the liquefied
deposits. For example, in the 1964 Alaska earthquake, soil liquefaction
caused many buildings to sink into the ground, eventually collapsing upon
themselves.
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5. Tsunami
Tsunamis are long-wavelength, long-period sea waves produced by the
sudden or abrupt movement of large volumes of water – including when
an earthquake occurs at sea. In the open ocean the distance between
wave crests can surpass 100 kilometers (62 mi), and the wave periods
can vary from five minutes to one hour. Such tsunamis travel 600-800
kilometers per hour (373–497 miles per hour), depending on water
depth. Large waves produced by an earthquake or a submarine landslide
can overrun nearby coastal areas in a matter of minutes.
Tsunamis can also travel thousands of kilometers across open ocean and
wreak destruction on far shores hours after the earthquake that
generated them.
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6. Floods
A flood is an overflow of any amount of water that reaches land. Floods
occur usually when the volume of water within a body of water, such as a
river or lake, exceeds the total capacity of the formation, and as a result
some of the water flows or sits outside of the normal perimeter of the body.
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VOLCANISM &
VOLCANOES
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Volcanism is one of the most impressive displays of Earth’s dynamic
internal processes. •
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What is Volcanism
the extrusion of lava (and the gases it contains) and the
ejection of pyroclastics onto the Earth’s surface or into the
atmosphere, as well as the formation of volcanoes and
extrusive igneous rocks by these processes.
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What is a Volcano?
A volcano is a vent
vent
or 'chimney' that
connects molten rock
(magma) from within
cone the Earth’s crust to
the Earth's surface.
The volcano includes
the surrounding cone
conduit of erupted material.
magma
chamber
Why Study Volcanism?
• Volcanic eruptions affect the atmosphere, hydrosphere,
and biosphere locally and sometimes globally.
Earthquakes:
Large volumes of magma moving through the shallow crust can
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How and why do volcanoes erupt?
Hot, molten rock (magma) is buoyant (has a lower density than the
surrounding rocks) and will rise up through the crust to erupt on the
surface.
Same principle as hot air rising, e.g. how a hot air balloon works
cap.
Small amounts of gas and (or) low viscosity (runny) magma will
form an effusive eruption
Where the magma just trickles out of the volcano (lava flow).
Explosive Vs. Non-explosive Volcanism
Magma composition is the key:
• Siliceous magmas are viscous and can retain more gas,
consequently they erupt more violently than basaltic magmas
Geological classifications
Three products
from an explosive
eruption
Ash fall
Pyroclastic flow
Pyroclastic surge
Pyroclastic flows on
Montserrat, buried
the capital city.
Direct
measurements of
pyroclastic flows
are extremely
dangerous!!!
Effusive Eruptions
Effusive eruptions are
characterised by outpourings
of lava on to the ground.
Hawaii
Courtesy of www.swisseduc.ch
Volcanism - Volcanic Gases
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Volcano Monitoring
and Hazard
Mitigation
Volcanic Fatalities
92,000 Tambora,
Indonesia 1815
36,000 Krakatau,
Indonesia 1883
29,000 Mt Pelee,
Martinique 1902
15,000 Mt Unzen,
Japan 1792
Courtesy of www.swisseduc.ch
Courtesy of www.swisseduc.ch
Pyroclastic Flow
For example,
eruption of
Vesuvius in 79
AD destroyed
the city of
Pompeii
Pompeii (79AD)
before after
29,000 people died….
Only 2 survived! Why?
How do pyroclastic flows cause
devastation?
Pyroclastic Flow - direct impact
Courtesy of www.swisseduc.ch
Pyroclastic Flow - burial
Pyroclastic Flow - burns
Pyroclastic Flow - lahars
Hot volcanic activity can melt
snow and ice
Melt water picks up rock and
debris
Forms fast flowing, high
energy torrents
Destroys all in its path
Pyroclastic Fall
• Ash load
– Collapses roofs
– Brings down power
lines
– Kills plants
– Contaminates water
supplies
– Respiratory hazard for
humans and animals
Lava Flow
Iceland, January
23,1973.
Large fissure
eruption
threatened the
town of
Vestmannaeyjar.
Lava Flow - Heimaey, Iceland
Volcano Observatories
are set up on all active
volcanoes that
threaten the human
population. These are
designed to monitor
and potentially to
predict the eruptive
behaviour of the
volcano in question.
Volcano Monitoring
Seismicity
Deformation
Gas Output
(on volcano and
remote sensing
techniques)
These three
things are the
most important
precursors to an
eruption.
Seismic Activity
Earthquake activity commonly precedes an eruption
Result of magma pushing up towards the surface
rock
This causes earthquakes
Seismic Activity
• Earthquake activity is measured by Seismographs
– Seismographs are stationed on the flanks of the
volcano
– These record the frequency, duration and intensity
of the earthquakes and report it back to the volcano
observatory.
Deformation Monitoring
“Tiltmeters” are used to measure the deformation
of the volcano
The tiltmeters measure changes in slope as small as one part per
million. A slope change of one part per million is equivalent to
raising the end of a board one kilometer long only one millimeter!
Deformation Monitoring
Tilltmeters can tell you when new material enters the magma
chamber.
A
Note the
B presence of
earthquakes in
relation to the
deformation.
Often it is a
combination of
events that
fore-warns of
an eruption.
Gas Monitoring
Commonly gas output from a volcano increases or changes
composition before an eruption.
As magma rises to the surface it releases (exsolves) much of
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What causes Landslides?
NATURAL FACTORS:
1.Gravity – gravity works more effectively on steep slopes.
o Cutting and deep excavations on slopes for buildings, roads, canals and
mining: causes modification of natural slopes, blocking of surface
drainage, loading of critical slopes and withdrawal to toes support,
promoting vulnerability.
COMBINATION OF FACTORS:
INDIRECT EFFECTS:
oInfluence of landslide in dam safety –failure of the slopes
bordering the reservoir, flooding caused by movement of large
masses of soil into the reservoir
INDIRECT LOSSES:
• Loss in production of agriculture or forest lands, reduced
property values, loss of revenue, increased cost, adverse effect
on water quality and loss of human productivity..
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B) Active Preventive Intervention
• Reforestation: root systems bind materials together and plants do both
prevent water percolation and take water up out of the slope.
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DISCUSSIONS
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