IMPORTANT FACTS ABOUT EARTHQUAKE
An earthquake can be defined as a
movement or tremor of the earth’s crust which originates naturally and below
the surface. It sometimes causes a permanent change of level at the surface,
but often the damage done by the shaking provides the only lasting visible
effect.
It can be produced by a volcanic
explosion; earthquakes, in fact, are common in most volcanic areas, and often precede or accompany
eruptions. It is more likely, however, to be of Tectonic
origin, and probably due to the existence of a Fault.
At
least three distinct sets of waves are set up by an earthquake, and at a
considerable distance from the place of origin, however, they all reach an observer
at approximately the same time. As these waves pass a place, the ground may be
felt to rock, and buildings sway backwards and forwards. Maximum damage is not
done always at the Epicenter,
where the movement is up and
down, but at places where the waves reaches the surface obliquely yet
which are still close enough to the origin for it to have lost little of its
force. A large earthquake is usually followed by a series of other shocks. An
earthquake which originates below or near to the sea causes great disturbance
of the water, and sometimes large waves emanate from it and travel a
considerable distance; on occasion these
waves have caused a greater loss of life, by flooding coastal regions, than the
earthquake itself. It is called Tsunami.
In the main earthquake regions, many of which
have active volcanoes in
their midst, an earthquake of some kind takes place practically every day; on
Hawaii, for instance, hundreds of minor shocks are recorded during the year. There
are extensive areas on the earth’s surface, however, where earthquakes are
rare. The three great regions where earthquakes have taken place more or less
frequently are;
1.
The west coast area of North and South America.
2.
A belt across southern Europe and south Asia.
3.
A belt in the Pacific Ocean which includes
Japan, the Philipines, and most of the East Indies. Of the thousands of
earthquakes which are recorded annually, only a hundred or so cause damage.
INSTRUMENT
Seismograph is an instrument for
recording earthquake shocks. The principle of its operation or action consists
in the disturbance of a portion of the apparatus by earth tremors, the suitable
amplification of the motion thus produced, and then its recording. The
vibrations used to be recorded by a pen tracing on a revolving drum, but in
more modern instruments a photographic record is obtained on a moving film.
Many seismographs are so sensitive that they will record vibrations due to an
earthquake thousands of miles away, and its distance and also its direction may
be approximately calculated. A properly equipped seismological observatory has
three different seismographs; two of these will record the horizontal components of the
earth’s vibrations, one in an east-west and the other in a north-south
direction, while the third will record the vertical components.
A common way t o measure the size of
earthquakes was invented by Charles Richter in 1935. The Richter scale uses
numbers from one to ten [1-10]
to express the energy released by an earthquake. Each number represents about
thirty-two times the energy released by an earthquake one number lower. For,
example, an earthquake rated 5 on the Richter scale releases thirty-two times
as much energy as one rated at 4. Any earthquake with a rating of 6 or more on
the Richter scale may cause damage to buildings.
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