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Seismic Waves Webquest - Dublin City Schools Dashboard
Seismic Waves Webquest - Dublin City Schools Dashboard

... 1.   Go   to     http://aspire.cosmic-­‐ray.org/Labs/SeismicWaves/       you   can   also   access   this   website  in  the  resources  section  of  this  lesson.     2.    Spend  1-­‐2  minutes  playing  with  the  Mighty  Wave  Make ...
Seismic structure of the European crust and upper mantle based on
Seismic structure of the European crust and upper mantle based on

... Some hitherto unidentified features, such as the Adria microplate, naturally emerge from the smooth starting model. Subducting slabs, slab detachments, ancient suture zones, continental rifts and back-arc basins are well resolved. For anelastic structure, we find an anti-correlation between shear wa ...
GG450 Lec 20 March 6, 2006
GG450 Lec 20 March 6, 2006

... There are two principle methods of seismic exploration, seismic refraction and seismic reflection. Both are important, but reflection is by far the most important. Reflection is used extensively in oil exploration and marine exploration, while refraction is used in engineering applications and crus ...
Summing-up - Zanichelli
Summing-up - Zanichelli

... ■■ Intensity is the evaluation of the effects produced by a seismic event on people, objects and territory. The scale used in Europe and America to evaluate the intensity of seismic events is the MCS scale (Mercalli- CàncaniSieberg), divided into 12 degrees. ■■ The values of intensity are also used ...
Continental Drift 1 The hypothesis that all the continents were once
Continental Drift 1 The hypothesis that all the continents were once

... the plates are in slow constant motion, driven by convection currents in the mantle. (Plate Tectonics) A trace of an organism preserved in rock. ...
3745-34-40 Seismic reflection survey requirements for
3745-34-40 Seismic reflection survey requirements for

V 1 V 2
V 1 V 2

... upward because of generally increasing velocity with depth ...
Chapter 17 Notes Know the definition of each of these vocabulary
Chapter 17 Notes Know the definition of each of these vocabulary

... ridges and destroyed at deep sea trenches. This was the missing link needed by Wegener to complete his model for continental drift. There are a dozen or so major plates and several smaller plates. Tectonic plates move in different directions and different rates over the Earth’s surface. Tectonic pla ...
19.1 Forces Within Earth
19.1 Forces Within Earth

... (1.7 X faster than S waves) 3. Secondary waves (S-waves, transverse): rocks move at right angle in relation to wave direction ...
Layers of Earth`s Interior Continental Drift/Seafloor
Layers of Earth`s Interior Continental Drift/Seafloor

... ○ Convergent Boundary ■ Plates are pushed together by compression forces ■ Effects: subduction zone, volcanoes, mountains, trenches, earthquakes ○ Transform Boundary - *San Andreas Fault ■ Shear forces cause plates to grind/slide past each other ■ Effects: shallow earthquakes ○ Earthquakes, along wi ...
Layers of the Earth
Layers of the Earth

... Asthenosphere: Capable of flow Lithosphere: rigid solid plates Oceanic Crust: 5-12 km thick, mostly basalt Continental Crust: 35 km thick, mostly granite, Oceanic crust is more dense than continental ...
Earthquakes
Earthquakes

... occur by the thousands every day around the world, usually in the form of small tremors. Some 80 percent of all the planet's earthquakes occur along the rim of the Pacific Ocean, called the "Ring of Fire" because of the preponderance of volcanic activity there as well. Most earthquakes occur at faul ...
Earthquakes - section 12.1
Earthquakes - section 12.1

... is so short that fast and slow cars are often just fractions of a second apart. In a long race, like the Indianapolis 500, the cars might be minutes apart. • This analogy explains why the difference between the arrival of P-waves and S-waves is greater the further from the epicenter a seismic statio ...
my fineshed pro
my fineshed pro

... • Stress in the earth's outer layer cause a pushing effect against the sides of the fault. Due to this motion, rocks slip or collide against each other releasing energy. This released energy travels in waves through the earth's crust and causes the shaking that we feel during an earthquake. Eventua ...
Chapter 6.1
Chapter 6.1

... shape. ...
Document
Document

... Basically reflects Archimedes principle ...
Lecture PowerPoint Slides
Lecture PowerPoint Slides

... in composition and Earth’s core is primarily composed of iron + nickel Similar in composition to Earth’s mantle (mafic) ...
Regents Earth Science – Unit 11: The Dynamic Crust
Regents Earth Science – Unit 11: The Dynamic Crust

... Fossils of shallow water animals found at great depths in the oceans indicate crust “submergence” ...
Studying collision and subduction mechanisms based on regional
Studying collision and subduction mechanisms based on regional

... 1. ISC is a very important dataset providing valuable information for regional and global tomography models. 2. Subduction zones are the best targets for studying using the travel times from the ISC catalogue. 3. Studying shapes of the slabs help in identifying driving forces of subduction. 4. In ar ...
Unit 2 Vocabulary – Plate Tectonics
Unit 2 Vocabulary – Plate Tectonics

... then drifted to their current locations mid-ocean ridge – a continuous mountain chain on the floor of all major ocean basins seafloor spreading – process where the sea floor spreads apart along both sides of an oceanic ridge as new crust forms from molten rock at the center. subduction zone – an are ...
Chapter 7, Section 1 Directed Reading A
Chapter 7, Section 1 Directed Reading A

... Holt Science and Technology ...
Earthquakes: Chapter 19
Earthquakes: Chapter 19

... Vibrations of the ground during an earthquake are called seismic waves.  3 Types of Seismic Waves: ...
File
File

... • Sudden return of elastically deformed rock to its original shape is called elastic rebound. Energy is released and some of it travels as seismic waves. These cause the earthquake. ...
Lesher - NSERC-CMIC Footprints
Lesher - NSERC-CMIC Footprints

... layer) the comprehensive range of multi-scale 3D geological-structural-lithologicalmineralogical-geochemical-petrophysical-geophysical data that define ore deposit footprints, and 3) develop workflows for how specialists in these areas need to interact in order to accomplish these goals. Phase I of ...
EARTH`S INTERIOR
EARTH`S INTERIOR

... and a deep oil well may have a depth of 8 km. The deepest scientific well has reached 12 km in Russia. Clearly, studies of Earth’s interior must be from analysis of indirect information. Geophysics is the branch of geology that applies physical laws and principles to a study of Earth. Geophysics inc ...
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Earthscope



Earthscope is an earth science program using geological and geophysical techniques to explore the structure and evolution of the North American continent and to understand the processes controlling earthquakes and volcanoes. The project has three components: USARRAY, the Plate Boundary Observatory, and the San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth.The project is funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), and the data produced is publicly accessible in real-time. Organizations associated with the project include UNAVCO, the Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology (IRIS), Stanford University, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) and National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Several international organizations also contribute to the initiative.
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