ABOUT EARTHQUAKES
Earthquakes are any sudden disturbance within the Earth manifested at the
surface by a shaking of the ground. This shaking, which accounts for the
destructiveness of an earthquake, is caused by the passage of elastic waves
through the Earth's rocks. These seismic waves are produced when some form of
stored energy, such as elastic strain, chemical energy, or gravitational
energy, is released suddenly.
Few natural phenomena can wreak as much havoc as
earthquakes. Over the centuries they have been responsible for millions of
deaths and an incalculable amount of damage to property. While earthquakes have
inspired dread and superstitious awe since ancient times, little was understood
about them until the emergence of seismology at the beginning of the 20th
century. Seismology, which involves the scientific study of all aspects of
earthquakes, has yielded answers to such long-standing questions as why and how
earthquakes occur. These matters are discussed in this article, as are the
distribution, size, and effects of earthquakes.
General considerations
Part 1
Principal types of seismic waves
Seismic waves generated by an earthquake source
are commonly classified into three main types. The first two, the P and S
waves, are propagated within the Earth, while the third, consisting of Love and
Rayleigh waves, is propagated along its surface. The existence of these types
of seismic waves was predicted during the 19th century, and modern
investigators have found that there is a close correspondence between such
theoretical calculations and seismographic measurements of the waves.
The P (or primary) waves travel through the body
of the Earth at the highest speeds. They are longitudinal waves that can be
transmitted by both solid and liquid materials in the Earth's interior. With P
waves, the particles of the medium vibrate in a manner similar to sound waves,
and the transmitting rocks are alternately compressed and expanded.
The other type of body wave, the S (or
secondary) wave, travels only through solid material within the Earth. With S
waves, the particle motion is transverse to the direction of travel and
involves the shearing of the transmitting rock.
Because of their greater speed, the P waves are
the first to reach any point on the Earth's surface. The first P-wave onset
starts from the spot where an earthquake originates. This point, usually at
some depth within the Earth, is called the focus, or hypocentre. The point
immediately above the focus at the surface is known as the epicentre.
Love and Rayleigh waves are guided by the free
surface of the Earth. They follow along after the P and S waves have passed
through the body of the planet. Both Love and Rayleigh waves involve horizontal
particle motion, but only the latter type has vertical ground displacements. As
Love and Rayleigh waves travel, they disperse into long wave trains, and at
substantial distances from the source they cause much of the shaking felt
during earthquakes.
Properties of seismic waves
At all distances from the focus, the mechanical
properties of the rocks, such as incompressibility, rigidity, and density, play
a role in the speed with which the waves travel and the shape and duration of
the wave trains. The layering of the rocks and the physical properties of
surface soil also affect these characteristics of the waves. In most cases,
elastic behaviour occurs in earthquakes, but the shaking of surface soils from
the incident seismic waves sometimes results in nonelastic behaviour, including
slumping (i.e., the downward and outward movement of unconsolidated material)
and the liquefaction of sandy soil.
When a seismic wave encounters an interface or
boundary that separates rocks of different elastic properties, it undergoes
reflection and refraction. There is a special complication if a conversion
between the wave types occurs at such a boundary: either an incident P or S
wave can yield in general reflected P and S waves and refracted P and S waves.
Boundaries between structural layers also give rise to diffracted and scattered
waves. These additional waves are in part responsible for the complications
observed in ground motion during earthquakes. Modern research is concerned with
computing, from the theory of waves in complex structures, synthetic records of
ground motion that are realistic in comparison with observed ground shaking.
The frequency range of seismic waves is large.
Seismic waves may have frequencies from as high as the audible range (greater
than 20 hertz [Hz]) to as low as the free oscillations of the whole Earth, with
gravest period being 54 minutes (i.e., the Earth vibrates in various modes, and
the mode with the lowest pitch takes 54 minutes to complete a single vibration;
see below Long-period oscillations of the globe). Attenuation of the waves in
rock imposes high-frequency limits, and in small to moderate earthquakes
measured surface waves have frequencies extending from about one to 0.005 Hz.
The amplitude range of seismic waves is also
great in most earthquakes. The displacements of the ground extend from 10-10 to
10-1 metres. In the greatest earthquakes, the ground amplitude of the
predominant P waves may be several centimetres at periods of two to five
seconds. Very close to the seismic sources of great earthquakes, investigators
have measured large wave amplitudes with accelerations to the ground exceeding
that of gravity at high frequencies and ground displacements of one metre at
low frequencies.
Seismic instruments and systems
Ground motion in earthquakes and microseisms
(small, often long-continuing oscillations of the ground that do not originate
in earthquakes) are both recorded by seismographs. Most of these instruments
are of the pendulum type. Still in use today are mechanical seismographs that
have a pendulum of large mass (up to several tons) and that produce seismograms
by scratching a line on smoked paper on a rotating drum. In more advanced
instruments, seismograms are recorded by means of a ray of light from the
mirror of a galvanometer through which passes an electric current generated by
electromagnetic induction when the pendulum of the seismograph moves.
Technological developments, notably in electronics, have given rise to
high-precision pendulum seismometers and sensors of ground motion. In these
instruments, the electric voltages produced by motions of the pendulum or the
equivalent are passed through electronic circuitry to amplify the ground motion
for more exact readings.
Generally speaking, seismographs are divided
into three types: short period; long (or intermediate) period; and ultra-long
period, or broad-band, instruments. Short-period instruments are used to record
P- and S-body waves with high magnification of the ground motion. For this
purpose, the seismograph response is shaped to peak at a period of about one second
or less. The long- or intermediate-period instruments of the type used by the
World-Wide Standard Seismographic Network (WWSSN; see below) have a response
maximum at about 20 seconds. Again, in order to provide as much flexibility as
possible for research work, the trend has been toward the operation of
very-broad-band seismographs, often with digital representation of the signals.
This is usually accomplished with very-long-period pendulums and electronic
amplifiers that pass signals in the 0.005 to 50 Hz band.
When seismic waves close to their source are to
be recorded, special design criteria are needed. Instrument sensitivity must
ensure that the largest ground movements remain on scale. For most
seismological and engineering purposes the wave frequency is high, and so the
pendulum or its equivalent can be small. For comparison, displacement meters
need a long free period and pendulum with consequent instability.
Accelerometers that measure the rate at which the ground velocity is changing
have an advantage for strong-motion recording, because they allow integration
to be carried out to estimate ground velocity and displacement. The ground
accelerations to be registered range up to twice gravity (2g). Recording such
accelerations can be easily accomplished with short torsion suspensions or
force-balance mass-spring systems.
Because many strong-motion instruments need to
be placed at unattended sites in ordinary buildings for periods of months or
years before a strong earthquake occurs, they usually record only when a
trigger mechanism is actuated with the onset of motion. Solid-state memories
are now used, particularly with digital recording instruments, making it
possible to preserve the first few seconds before the trigger starts the
permanent recording. In the past, recordings were usually made on film strips
for up to a few minutes' duration. In present-day equipment, digitized signals
are stored directly on magnetic cassette tape or on a memory chip. In most
cases absolute timing has not been provided on strong-motion records but only
accurate relative time marks; the present trend, however, is to provide
Universal Time (the local mean time of the prime meridian) by means of special
radio receivers or small crystal clocks.
The prediction of strong ground motion and
response of engineered structures in earthquakes depends critically on
measurements of the spatial variability of earthquake intensities near the
seismic wave source. In an effort to secure such measurements, special arrays
of strong-motion seismographs are being installed in areas of high seismicity
around the world. Large-aperture seismic arrays (linear dimension on the order
of one to 10 kilometres) of strong-motion accelerometers can now be used to
improve estimations of speed, direction of propagation, and type of seismic
wave components. Like an array of radio telescopes, a seismic array allows wave
correlations for consecutive time and frequency intervals so that variations in
shaking over small-to-moderate distances can be measured.
Finally, because 70 percent of the Earth's
surface is covered by water, there is a need for ocean-bottom seismometers to
augment the global land-based system of recording stations. Research is under
way to determine the feasibility of extensive long-term recording by
instruments on the seafloor.
Because of the mechanical difficulties of
maintaining permanent ocean-bottom instrumentation, different systems have been
considered. These include instruments that are placed in an ocean-bottom
package; signals from the instruments are either transmitted to the ocean
surface for retransmission by auxiliary apparatus or transmitted via cable to a
shore-based station. Another system is designed to release automatically its
recording component, allowing it to float to the surface for later recovery.
The use of ocean-bottom seismographs should yield
much improved global coverage of seismic waves and provide important
information on the seismicity of oceanic regions. Ocean-bottom seismographs
will enable investigators to determine the details of the crustal structure of
the seafloor and, because of the relative thinness of the oceanic crust, should
make it possible for them to collect clear seismic information about the upper
mantle. Such systems are also expected to provide new data on focal mechanism,
on the origin and propagation of microseisms, and on the nature of
ocean-continent margins.
Effects of earthquakes
Part 2
Primary effects
Earthquakes have varied effects, including
changes in geologic features, damage to man-made structures, and impact on
human and animal life.
Geomorphologic changes are often caused by an
earthquake: e.g., movements--either vertical or horizontal--along geological
fault traces; the raising, lowering, and tilting of the ground surface with
related effects on the flow of groundwater; liquefaction of sandy ground; landslides;
and mudflows. The investigation of topographical changes is aided by geodetic
measurements, which are made systematically in a number of countries seriously
affected by earthquakes.
Earthquakes can do significant damage to
buildings, bridges, pipelines, railways, embankments, and other man-made
structures. The type and extent of damage inflicted are related to the strength
of the ground motions and to the behaviour of the foundation soils.
In the most intensely damaged region, called the
meizoseismal area, the effects of a severe earthquake are usually complicated
and depend on the topography and the nature of the surface materials; they are
often severer on soft alluvium and unconsolidated sediments than on hard rock.
At distances of more than 100 kilometres (62 miles) from the source, the main
damage is caused by surface waves. In mines there is frequently little damage
below depths of a few hundred metres even though the surface immediately above
is considerably affected.
Part 3
Further effects of interest are the occurrence
of earthquake sounds and lights. The sounds are generally low-pitched and have
been likened to the noise of an underground train passing through a station.
The occurrence of such sounds implies the existence of significant short
periods in the P waves in the ground (a wave period is the length of time
between the arrival of successive crests in a wave train). Occasionally
luminous flashes, streamers, and balls are seen in the night sky during
earthquakes. These lights have been attributed to electric induction in the air
along the earthquake source.
Intensity scales
The level of violence of seismic shaking varies
considerably over the affected area. This intensity is not capable of simple
quantitative definition and, particularly before seismographs capable of
accurate measurement of ground motion were developed, the shaking was estimated
by reference to intensity scales that describe the effects in qualitative
terms. Subsequently, the divisions in these scales have been associated with
accelerations of the local ground shaking. Intensity depends, however, in a
complicated way not only on ground accelerations but also on the periods and
other features of seismic waves, the distance of the point from the source, and
the local geological structure. Furthermore, it is distinct from magnitude,
which is a measure of earthquake size specified by a seismograph reading (see
below Earthquake magnitude).
A number of different intensity scales have been
set up during the past century and applied to both current and ancient
destructive earthquakes. For many years the most widely used was the 10-point
scale devised by Michele Stefano de Rossi and Fran篩s-Alphonse
Forel in 1878. The scale now generally employed in
Part 3
Modified Mercalli Scale of Felt Intensity (1931;
Abridged)
I. Not felt. Marginal and long-period effects of
large earthquakes.
II. Felt by persons at rest, on upper floors, or
otherwise favourably placed to sense tremors.
III. Felt indoors. Hanging objects swing.
Vibrations like passing of light trucks. Duration can be estimated.
IV. Vibration like passing of heavy trucks (or
sensation of a jolt like a heavy ball striking the walls). Standing motorcars
rock. Windows, dishes, doors rattle. Glasses clink. Crockery clashes. In the
upper range of IV, wooden walls and frames creak.
V. Felt outdoors; direction may be estimated.
Sleepers wakened. Liquids disturbed, some spilled. Small objects displaced or
upset. Doors swing, open, close. Pendulum clocks stop, start, change rate.
VI. Felt by all; many frightened and run
outdoors. Persons walk unsteadily. Pictures fall off walls. Furniture moved or
overturned. Weak plaster and masonry cracked. Small bells ring (church,
school). Trees, bushes shaken.
VII. Difficult to stand. Noticed by drivers of
motorcars. Hanging objects quiver. Furniture broken. Damage to weak masonry.
Weak chimneys broken at roof line. Fall of plaster, loose bricks, stones,
tiles, cornices. Waves on ponds; water turbid with mud. Small slides and caving
along sand or gravel banks. Large bells ring. Concrete irrigation ditches
damaged.
VIII. Steering of motorcars affected. Damage to
masonry; partial collapse. Some damage to reinforced masonry; none to
reinforced masonry designed to resist lateral forces. Fall of stucco and some
masonry walls. Twisting, fall of chimneys, factory stacks, monuments, towers,
elevated tanks. Frame houses moved on foundations if not bolted down; loose
panel walls thrown out. Decayed piling broken off. Branches broken from trees.
Changes in flow or temperature of springs and wells. Cracks in wet ground and
on steep slopes.
IX. General panic. Weak masonry destroyed;
ordinary masonry heavily damaged, sometimes with complete collapse; reinforced
masonry seriously damaged. Serious damage to reservoirs. Underground pipes
broken. Conspicuous cracks in ground. In alluvial areas, sand and mud ejected,
earthquake fountains, sand craters.
X. Most masonry and frame structures destroyed
with their foundations. Some well-built wooden structures and bridges
destroyed. Serious damage to dams, dikes, embankments. Large landslides. Water
thrown on banks of canals, rivers, lakes, etc. Sand and mud shifted
horizontally on beaches and flat land. Railway rails bent slightly.
XI. Rails bent greatly. Underground pipelines
completely out of service.
XII. Damage nearly total. Large rock masses
displaced. Lines of sight and level distorted. Objects thrown into air.
With the use of an intensity scale, it is
possible to summarize the macroseismic data for an earthquake by constructing isoseismal
curves, which are the loci of points that demarcate areas of equal intensity.
If there were complete symmetry about the vertical through the earthquake's
focus, the isoseismals would be circles with the epicentre as centre. However,
because of the many unsymmetrical factors influencing the intensity, the curves
are often far from circular.
The most probable position of the epicentre
based on macroseismic data will be at a point inside the area of highest
intensity. In some cases, it is verified by instrumental data that the
epicentre is satisfactorily determined in this way, but not infrequently the
true epicentre lies outside the area of greatest intensity.
Some great earthquakes
About 50,000 earthquakes large enough to be felt
or noticed without the aid of instruments occur annually over the entire Earth.
Of these, approximately 100 are of sufficient size to produce substantial
damage if their centres are near areas of habitation. Very great earthquakes
occur at an average rate of about one per year. Among the great earthquakes of
the past are those of Lisbon in 1755; New Madrid, Mo., U.S., in December 1811
and January and February 1812; San Francisco in 1906; Tokyo-Yokohama in 1923;
the coast of Chile in 1960; south-central Alaska in 1964; T'ang-shan, China, in
1976; and Mexico in 1985. Their devastating effects are briefly described
below.
On
New
Three large earthquakes occurred near New Madrid
in southern
On April 18, 1906, at about 5:12 AM, the San
Andreas Fault slipped over a segment about 430 kilometres long, extending from
San Juan Bautista in San Benito County to the upper Mattole River in Humboldt
County and from there perhaps out under the sea to an unknown distance. The
shaking was felt from
Tokyo-Yokohama
A great earthquake struck the Tokyo-Yokohama
metropolitan area near noon on Sept. 1, 1923. The death toll from this shock
was estimated at more than 140,000. Fifty-four percent of the brick buildings
and 10 percent of the reinforced concrete structures collapsed. Many hundreds
of thousands of houses were either shaken down or burned. The shock started a
tsunami that reached a height of 12 metres at Atami on Sagami-nada (
The source of this earthquake in 1960 extended
over a distance of about 1,100 kilometres along the southern Chilean coast.
Casualties included about 5,700 killed and 3,000 injured, and property damage
amounted to many millions of dollars. Seismic sea waves excited by the earthquake
caused death and destruction in
On March 27, 1964, a great earthquake with a
Richter magnitude 8.3-8.5 (see below) occurred in south central
T'ang-shan
The coal-mining and industrial city of
The main shock occurred at 7:18 AM on Sept. 19,
1985. The cause was a fault slip along the Benioff zone (a band of
intermediate- and deep-earthquake foci along a planar dipping zone) under the
Pacific coast of
Causes of Earthquakes
Principal mechanisms in nature
Earthquakes are caused by the sudden release of energy within some limited region of the rocks of the Earth. The form of energy involved is produced by elastic strain, gravitational potential, chemical reactions, or motion of bodies. Of these, the release of elastic strain energy is the most important, since this form of energy is the only kind that is stored in sufficient quantity in the Earth to produce major earthquakes. Earthquakes associated with this type of energy release are called tectonic earthquakes.
Measurements of triangulation lines across the San Andreas
Fault before and after its rupture in the 1906
Another type of earthquake, that associated with volcanic activity, is called a volcanic earthquake. Yet, it is likely that even here the energy released may be the result of a relatively sudden slip of rock masses and the consequent release of elastic strain energy. The energy, however, may in part be of hydrodynamic origin due to the motion of magma in reservoirs beneath the volcano or to the release of gas under pressure.
The elastic rebound theory of an earthquake source envisages the flinging of rock masses in opposite directions on each side of the rupturing fault as the fault rupture progresses along the fault. In the rupture, the rock masses spring back to a position where the elastic strain is less.
This movement at any point may not take place at once but rather in irregular steps. These sudden stoppings and startings give rise to the vibrations that propagate as seismic waves. The irregular properties of fault rupture are now included in the modeling of earthquake sources, both physically and mathematically.
Roughnesses along the fault are referred to as asperities, and places where the rupture slows or stops are said to be fault barriers. Fault rupture starts at the earthquake focus and propagates unilaterally or bilaterally over the fault plane until stopped or slowed at a barrier. The result is a redistribution of elastic strain, which may or may not break the barrier. Sometimes the fault rupture is reinstated on the far side of the barrier; sometimes the stresses in the rocks eventually produce a breakage, and the rupture continues.
Earthquakes have different properties depending on the type of fault slip that causes them. The geological interpretation of a fault is given in terms of standard geometries . The usual fault model has a strike (direction from north of the horizontal line in the fault plane) and a dip (angle between direction of steepest slope and horizontal). The hanging wall lies over the footwall, the lower wall of an inclined fault.
Relative offsets parallel to the strike produce strike-slip faulting while those parallel to the dip generate dip-slip faulting. Strike-slip faults are right or left lateral, depending on whether the block on the opposite side of the fault from the observer moves to his right or left. Dip-slip faults are normal if the hanging-wall block moves downward relative to the footwall block; the opposite motion produces reverse or thrust faulting. A mixed offset results in oblique-slip faulting, which is measured either by the plunge or by the slip angle.
Observed faults are assumed to be the seat of one or more past earthquakes, though movements along faults are often slow, and most geologically ancient faults are now aseismic (i.e., cause no earthquakes). The actual faulting in an earthquake may be complex, and it is often not clear whether in a particular earthquake the total energy issues from a single fault plane.
Observed geological faults sometimes show overall relative displacements on the order of hundreds of kilometres, whereas the amplitudes of seismic waves reach only several centimetres. In the 1976 T'ang-shan earthquake, for example, a surface strike-slip of about one metre was observed along the causative fault.
An important research technique is to infer the character of faulting in an earthquake from observed distributions of the directions of the first onsets in waves arriving at the Earth's surface. Onsets have been called compressional or dilatational according to whether the direction is away from or toward the focus, respectively. A polarity pattern becomes recognizable when the directions of the P-wave onsets are plotted on a map: there are broad areas in which the first onsets are predominantly compressions, separated from predominantly dilatational areas by nodal curves near which the P-wave amplitudes are abnormally small.
In 1926 the American geophysicist Perry E. Byerly used patterns of P onsets over the entire globe to infer the orientation of the fault plane in a large earthquake. The polarity method yields two P-nodal curves at the Earth's surface. For a homogeneous Earth, one curve is in the plane containing the assumed fault, and the other is in the plane (called the auxiliary plane) that passes through the focus and is perpendicular to the forces of the plane. For the actual Earth, the nodal curves are displaced from these locations because of the curvature of the wave paths between focus and surface, but knowledge of Earth structure enables allowance to be made for this. Given an adequately well-determined pattern of first P-wave movements, it is possible to locate two planes, one of which is the plane containing the fault.
Artificial means of inducing earthquakes
Earthquakes are sometimes caused by human activities. Such activities include the injection of fluids into deep wells, the detonation of large underground nuclear explosions, the excavation of mines, and the filling of large reservoirs. In the case of deep mining, the removal of rock produces changes in the strain around the tunnels. Slip on preexisting faults or outward shattering of rock into the cavities may occur. In all other situations, the induction mechanism is thought to involve elastic strain release, as in the case of tectonic earthquakes. Here, earthquakes are triggered by small changes in the local strain field that produce rock fracture or fault slip. Local changes in strain around large underground explosions have been known to produce slip on already strained faults in the vicinity.
Reservoir induction
Of the various activities cited above, the filling of large reservoirs is among the most important. More than 20 cases have been documented in which local seismicity has increased following the impounding of water behind high dams. Other claims cannot be substantiated because the necessary observations that allow comparison of earthquake occurrence before and after filling do not exist. Reservoir-induction effects are most marked for reservoirs exceeding 100 metres in depth and one cubic kilometre in volume.
Three cases where such effects have very probably been
involved are the Hoover Dam in the
The specific earthquake mechanisms associated with
reservoir induction have been established in a few cases. For the main shock at
the Koyna Dam and Reservoir in India, the evidence favours strike-slip motion,
and at Hsin-feng-chiang Dam in China, the principal shock can also be
attributed to the strike-slip mechanism. At both the Kremasta Dam in
Seismology and nuclear explosions
In 1958 representatives from several countries, including
the
Recent seismological work on test ban treaty verification has involved using high-resolution seismographs, estimating the yield of explosions, studying wave attenuation in the Earth, determining wave amplitude and frequency spectra discriminants, and applying seismic arrays (see above). The findings of such research have shown that underground nuclear explosions, compared with natural earthquakes, usually generate larger amplitude P waves relative to the surface waves. The extension of seismic explosion research (and the experimental controls that go with it) to seismological problems has yielded useful information on seismic wave propagation in general and on the Earth's structure.
Distribution of earthquakes
Earthquake observatories
During the late 1950s there existed worldwide only about 700 seismographic stations equipped with seismographs of various types and frequency responses. Few instruments were calibrated, so that actual ground motions could not be measured and timing errors of several seconds were common. The WWSSN, the aforementioned worldwide standardized seismographic network, was established to help remedy this situation. Each station of the WWSSN has six seismographs--three short-period and three long-period seismographs.
Timing and accuracy are maintained by crystal clocks, and a
calibration pulse is placed daily on each record. By 1967 the WWSSN consisted
of about 120 stations distributed over 60 countries. Other countries, such as
By the 1980s a further upgrading of permanent seismographic stations had begun with the installation of digital equipment. Among the global networks of digital seismographic stations now in operation are the seismic research observatories in boreholes 100 metres deep; modified high-gain, long-period (surface) observatories; and digital worldwide standardized seismographic network (DWWSSN) stations. In addition, a number of gravimeters capable of digital recording and response to very long wavelengths have been installed throughout the world as part of the International Deployment of Accelerographs (IDA) network. The main aim is to equip global observatories with seismographs that can record seismic waves over a broad band of frequencies.
Locating earthquake epicentres
At some observatories it is customary to make provisional estimates of the epicentres of the more important earthquakes. These estimates provide preliminary information locally about particular earthquakes and serve as first approximations for the calculations subsequently made by large coordinating centres.
In the case of a single observatory, an earthquake's epicentre can often be estimated from the readings of three perpendicular component seismograms. For example, for a shallow earthquake the epicentral distance, if less than 105, is indicated by the interval between the arrival times of P and S waves; the azimuth and angle of emergence are indicated by a comparison of the sizes and directions of the first movements shown in the seismograms and by the relative sizes of later waves, particularly surface waves. It should be noted, however, that in certain regions the first wave movement at a station arrives from a direction differing from the azimuth toward the epicentre. The explanation is usually in terms of strong variations in geological structures.
When data from more than one observatory are available, an earthquake's epicentre may be estimated from the epicentral distances indicated by the times of travel of the P and S waves from source to recorder. Nowadays, in many seismically active regions, networks of seismographs with telemetry transmission and centralized timing and recording are common. Whether analog or digital recording is used, such integrated systems greatly simplify observatory work: multichannel signal displays make identification and timing of phase onsets easier and more reliable.
Moreover, modern on-line microprocessors can be programmed to pick automatically, with some degree of confidence, the onset of a significant common phase, such as P, by correlation of waveforms from parallel network channels. With the aid of specially designed computer programs, seismologists can then locate distant earthquakes to within about 10 kilometres and the epicentre of a local earthquake to within just a few kilometres.
Catalogs of felt earthquakes and earthquake observations
have appeared intermittently for many centuries. The earliest known list of
instrumentally recorded earthquakes with computed times of origin and
epicentres is that for the period 1899-1903. In subsequent years, cataloging of
earthquakes has become increasingly more uniform and complete. Especially
valuable is the service provided by the International Seismological Centre
(ISC) at
Various national and regional centres control networks of
stations and act as intermediaries between individual stations and the
international organizations. Examples of long-standing national centres include
the Japan Meteorological Agency and the Canadian Seismograph Network operated
by the Department of Energy, Mines and Resources of Ottawa. These centres
normally make estimates of the magnitudes, epicentres, origin times, and focal
depths of local earthquakes. Of particular importance is the U.S. National
Earthquake Information Service in
Geographic concentrations of earthquakes
The Earth's major earthquakes occur mainly in belts coinciding with the margins of tectonic plates. This has long been apparent from early catalogs of felt earthquakes and is even more readily discernible in modern seismicity maps, which show instrumentally determined epicentres.
One major earthquake belt passes around the Pacific Ocean
and affects coastlines bordering on it, as, for example, those of
A second belt passes through the Mediterranean region
eastward through Asia and joins the first belt in the
Most other parts of the world experience at least occasional shallow earthquakes--those that originate within 60 kilometres of the Earth's outer surface. The great majority of earthquakes are shallow. It should be noted that the geographic distribution of smaller earthquakes is less precisely determined, partly because the availability of relevant data is dependent on the geographical distribution of observatories.
A distinction is made between "intermediate" focal depths ranging from about 60 to 300 kilometres and greater focal depths. Of the total energy released in earthquakes, 12 percent comes from intermediate earthquakes and 3 percent from deeper ones. The frequency of occurrence falls off rapidly with increasing focal depth in the intermediate range, while below this the distribution in depth is fairly uniform until the greatest focal depths are approached.
Deep-focus earthquakes commonly occur in patterns called Benioff zones that dip into the Earth. Dip angles average about 45, with some shallower and others nearly vertical. Benioff zones are found under tectonically active island arcs, such as Japan, Vanuatu (formerly the New Hebrides), the Kingdom of Tonga (islands), and Alaska, and they are normally but not always (e.g., Romania and the Hindu Kush mountain system) associated with deep ocean trenches, such as those along the South American Andes. In most Benioff zones intermediate- and deep-earthquake foci lie in a narrow layer, although recent precise hypocentral locations in Japan and elsewhere show two distinct parallel bands of foci 20 kilometres apart. Careful estimation gives about 680 kilometres for the deepest depths globally.
Tectonic associations
There is a clear correspondence between the geographical distribution of volcanoes and major earthquakes, particularly in the circum-Pacific earthquake belts and along mid-oceanic ridges. Volcanic vents, however, are generally at a distance of some hundreds of kilometres from the majority of the epicentres of major shallow earthquakes, and many earthquake sources occur nowhere near active volcanoes. Earthquakes of intermediate focal depth frequently occur directly below structures marked by volcanic vents, but there is probably no immediate causal connection between these earthquakes and the volcanic activity, both most likely resulting from the same tectonic processes.
Seismicity patterns had no strong global theoretical explanation until a dynamical model called plate tectonics was developed during the late 1960s. This theory holds that the Earth's upper shell, or lithosphere, consists of nearly a dozen large, quasi-stable slabs called plates. The thickness of each of these plates extends to a depth of roughly 80 kilometres.
The plates move horizontally, relative to neighbouring plates, on a layer of softer rock. The rate of movement ranges from one to 10 centimetres per year over a shell of lesser strength called the asthenosphere. At the plate edges where there is contact with adjoining plates, boundary tectonic forces operate on the rocks, causing physical and chemical changes in them. New lithosphere is created at mid-oceanic ridges by the upwelling and cooling of magma from the Earth's mantle. The horizontally moving plates are believed to be absorbed at the ocean trenches, where a subduction process carries the lithosphere downward along the Benioff zones into the Earth's interior. The total amount of lithospheric material destroyed at these subduction zones equals that generated at the ridges.
Seismological evidence (e.g., location of major earthquake belts) is broadly in agreement with this kinematic model. Earthquake sources are concentrated along the midoceanic ridges, which correspond to divergent plate boundaries. At the subduction zones, which are associated with convergent plate boundaries, intermediate- and deep-focus earthquakes in the Benioff zone mark the location of the upper part of a dipping plate. The focal mechanisms indicate that the stresses are aligned with the dip of the lithosphere underneath the adjacent continent or island arc.
Some earthquakes associated with mid-oceanic ridges are confined to strike-slip faults that offset the ridge crests. The majority of the earthquakes occurring along such horizontal shear faults are characterized by slip motions. Also consistent with the plate tectonics theory is the high seismicity encountered along the edges of plates that slide past each other.
Examples of plate boundaries of this kind, which are
sometimes called fracture zones, include the San Andreas Fault in
One other point that correlates with the plate theory is the low seismicity within plates. Small to large earthquakes do occur in limited regions well within the boundaries of plates; however, such interplate seismic events must be explained by mechanisms other than plate motions and their associated phenomena.
Aftershocks, foreshocks, and swarms
Usually a major or even moderate earthquake of shallow focus is followed by many lesser earthquakes close to the original source region. This is to be expected because the fault rupture producing a major earthquake does not relieve all of the accumulated strain energy at once. Furthermore, this dislocation is liable to cause an increase in the stress and strain at a number of places in the vicinity of the focal region, bringing crustal rocks at certain points close to the stress at which fracture occurs. In some cases the frequency of aftershocks may be for a time as high as 1,000 or more a day.
Sometimes a large earthquake is followed by another at approximately the same focus within an hour or perhaps a day. An extreme case of this is multiple earthquakes. In most instances, however, the first principal earthquake of a series is much more energetic than the aftershocks. In general, the number of aftershocks per day decreases with increasing time. The aftershock frequency is roughly inversely proportional to the time since the occurrence of the largest earthquake of the series.
Most major earthquakes occur without detectable warning from less energetic precursor earthquakes, but some principal earthquakes are preceded by foreshocks. In another pattern of occurrence, large numbers of small earthquakes occur in a region over an interval of time that may extend to some months without a major earthquake occurring.
In the Matsushiro region of
Extraterrestrial seismic phenomena
Space vehicles have carried equipment to the surface of the Moon and Mars with which to record seismic waves, and seismologists on Earth have received telemetered signals from seismic events in both cases.
By 1969 seismographs had been placed at six sites on the Moon during the U.S. Apollo missions. Recording of seismic data ceased in September 1977. The instruments detected between 600 and 3,000 moonquakes during each year of their operation, though most of these seismic events were very small. The ground noise on the lunar surface is low compared with that of the Earth so that the seismographs could be operated at very high magnifications. Because there was more than one station on the Moon, it was possible to use the arrival times of P and S waves at the lunar stations from the moonquakes to determine foci in the same way as is done on the Earth.
Moonquakes are of three types. First, there are the events caused by the impact of lunar modules, booster rockets, and meteorites. The lunar seismograph stations were able to detect meteorites hitting the Moon's surface more than 1,000 kilometres away. The two other types of moonquakes had natural sources in the Moon's interior: they presumably resulted from rock fracturing, as on Earth. The most common type of natural moonquake had deep foci, at depths of 600 to 1,000 kilometres; the less common variety had shallow focal depths.
Seismological research on Mars has been less successful. Only one of the seismometers carried to the Martian surface by the U.S. Viking landers during the mid-1970s remained operational. Perhaps only one marsquake was detected in 546 Martian days.
Size, energy, and frequency of earthquakes
As noted earlier, small ground motions known as microseisms are commonly recorded by seismographs. These weak wave motions are not generated by earthquakes, and they complicate accurate recording of the latter. They, however, are of scientific interest because their form is related to the Earth's surface structure.
Some microseisms have local causes, as, for example, those due either to traffic or machinery, or to local wind effects and storms. Another class of microseisms exhibits features that are very similar to those on records traced at earthquake observatories distributed over a wide area. The features include approximately simultaneous occurrence of maximum amplitudes and similar wave frequencies at all the observatories concerned.
These microseisms may persist for many hours and have more or less regular periods of about five to eight seconds. The largest amplitudes of such microseisms are on the order of 10-3 centimetres and occur in coastal regions. The amplitudes also depend to some extent on local geological structure. There is a fair correlation between the size of microseisms and the occurrence of stormy weather conditions in some adjacent region.
Some microseisms are generated by the action of rough surf against an extended steep coast, while others are produced when large standing water waves are formed at sea. The period of the latter type of microseism is half that of the standing wave.
Earthquake magnitude
Because the size of earthquakes varies enormously it is necessary for purposes of relative comparison to compress the range of wave amplitudes measured on seismograms by means of a mathematical device. In 1935 the American seismologist Charles F. Richter set up a "magnitude scale of earthquakes" as the logarithm to base 10 of the maximum seismic wave amplitude (in thousandths of a millimetre) recorded on a standard seismograph (the Wood-Anderson torsion pendulum seismograph) at a distance of 100 kilometres from the earthquake epicentre.
Reduction of amplitudes observed at various distances to the amplitudes expected at the standard distance of 100 kilometres is made on the basis of empirical tables. Richter magnitudes ML are computed on the assumption that the ratio of the maximum wave amplitudes at two given distances is the same for all earthquakes considered and is independent of azimuth.
Richter first applied his magnitude scale to shallow-focus
earthquakes recorded within 600 kilometres of the epicentre in the southern
At the present time, a number of different magnitude scales are used by scientists and engineers as a measure of the relative size of an earthquake. The P-wave magnitude (mb), for one, is defined in terms of the amplitude of the P wave recorded on a standard seismograph. Similarly, the surface-wave magnitude (Ms) is defined in terms of the logarithm of the maximum amplitude of the ground motion for surface waves with a wave period of 20 seconds.
Taken as such, a magnitude scale has no lower or upper limit. Sensitive seismographs can record earthquakes with magnitudes of negative value and have recorded magnitudes up to about 9.0. (The 1906 San Francisco earthquake, for example, had a Richter magnitude of 8.25.)
There is, in effect, no direct mechanical basis for magnitude. Rather, it is an empirical parameter analogous to stellar magnitude. In modern practice, a more soundly based mechanical measure of earthquake size is used--namely, the seismic moment (M0). Such a parameter is related to the angular leverage of the forces that produce the slip on the causative fault.
It can be calculated both from recorded seismic waves and
from field measurements of the size of the fault rupture. Consequently, seismic
moment provides a more uniform scale of earthquake size. Still another
magnitude currently in use is called moment magnitude (Mw). It is proportional
to the logarithm of the seismic moment. Given the above definitions, the great
EARTHQUAKES - 3
Energy and frequency of occurrence
Energy in an earthquake passing a particular
surface site can be calculated directly from the recordings of strong ground
motion, which is given as ground velocity. Such recordings indicate an energy
rate of 105 watts per square metre near a moderate-sized earthquake source. The
total power output of a rupturing fault in a shallow earthquake is on the order
of 1014 watts compared with the 105 watts generated in rocket motors.
The magnitude Ms has also been connected with
the energy Es of an earthquake by empirical formulas. These give Es = 6.3 1011
and 1.4 1025 ergs for earthquakes of Ms = 0 and 8.9, respectively. A unit
increase in Ms thus corresponds to a 32-fold increase in energy. Negative
magnitudes correspond to the smallest instrumentally recorded earthquakes, a
magnitude of 1.5 to the smallest felt earthquakes and one of 3 to any shock
felt at a distance of up to 20 kilometres. Earthquakes of magnitude 5.0 cause
light damage near the epicentre; those of 6 are destructive over a restricted
area; and those of 7.5 are at the lower limit of major earthquakes.
The total annual energy released in all
earthquakes is about 1025 ergs, corresponding to a rate of work between
10,000,000 and 100,000,000 kilowatts. This is on the order of 0.001 of the
annual amount of heat escaping from the Earth's interior. Ninety percent of the
total seismic energy comes from earthquakes of magnitude 7.0 and higher--i.e.,
those whose energy is on the order of 1023 ergs or more.
There also are empirical relations for the
frequencies of earthquakes of various magnitudes. Suppose N to be the average
number of shocks per year for which the magnitude lies in the range Ms +/- Ms.
Then log10 N = a - bMs fits the data well both globally and for particular
regions; e.g., for shallow earthquakes worldwide: a = 6.7, b = 0.9 when Ms >
6.0. The frequency for larger earthquakes therefore increases by a factor of
about 10 when the magnitude is diminished by one unit. The increase in
frequency with reduction in Ms falls short, however, of matching the decrease
in the energy E. Thus larger earthquakes are overwhelmingly responsible for
most of the total seismic energy release. The number of earthquakes per year
with mb > 4.0 may reach 20,000.
Earthquake prediction
Observation and interpretation of precursory
phenomena
The search for periodic cycles in earthquake
occurrence is an old one. Generally, periodicities in time and space for major
earthquakes have not been widely detected or accepted. One problem is that
earthquake catalogs are not homogeneous in their selection and reporting. The
most extensive catalog of this kind comes from
Another approach to the statistical occurrence
of earthquakes involves the postulation of trigger forces that initiate the
rupture. Such forces have been attributed, for example, to severe weather
conditions, volcanic activity, and tidal forces. Usually correlations are made
between the physical phenomena assumed to provide the trigger and the repetition
of earthquakes. Inquiry must always be made to discover whether a causative
link is actually present. No trigger mechanism, at least for moderate to large
earthquakes, has been found that satisfies the various criteria necessary to
establish a clear physical connection.
Statistical methods also have been tried with
populations of regional earthquakes. It has been suggested that the slope b of
the regression line between the number of earthquakes and the magnitude,
mentioned in the previous section, for a region may change characteristically
with time. Specifically, the b value for the population of foreshocks of a
major earthquake may be significantly smaller than the mean b value for the
region averaged over a long interval of time.
For prediction of the time of earthquake
occurrence, a proposal is that precursory changes in a region will cause the
velocity of seismic waves through the region to change. Thus, if appropriate
travel-time residuals are plotted as a function of time, fluctuations will
provide a forewarning. The elastic rebound theory for the occurrence of
earthquakes described earlier allows rough prediction of large shallow
earthquakes. H.F. Reid gave, for example, a crude forecast of the next great
earthquake near
For many years prediction research has been
influenced by the basic argument that strain accumulates in the rock masses in
the vicinity of a fault and results in crustal deformation. Deformations have
been measured in the horizontal direction along active faults (by trilateration
and triangulation) and in the vertical direction by precise leveling and
tiltmeters. Some investigators believe that changes in groundwater level occur
prior to earthquakes; variations of this sort have been reported mainly from
The theory of dilatancy of rock prior to rupture
occupies a central position in recent discussions of premonitory phenomena of
earthquakes. It is based on the observation that many solids exhibit dilatancy
(i.e., an increase in volume) during deformation. For earthquake prediction,
the significance of dilatancy is its effects on various measurable quantities of
the Earth's crust, such as seismic velocities, electric resistivity, and ground
and water levels.
The consequences of dilatancy for earthquake
prediction are summarized in the Table . The best studied consequence is the
effect on the seismic velocities. The influence of internal cracks and pores on
the elastic properties of rocks can be clearly demonstrated in laboratory
measurements of those properties as a function of hydrostatic pressure. In the
case of saturated rocks, experiments predict--for shallow earthquakes--that
dilatancy occurs as a portion of the crust is stressed to failure, causing a
decrease in the velocities of seismic waves. Recovery of velocity is brought
about by subsequent rise of pore pressure of water. The rise of pore pressure
also has the effect of weakening the rock and enhancing fault slip.
Strain buildup in the focal region may have
significant effects on other observable properties, including electrical
conductivity and gas concentration. Because the electrical conductivity of
rocks depends largely on interconnected water channels within the rocks,
resistivity may increase before the cracks become saturated. As pore fluid is
expelled from the closing cracks, the local water table would rise and
concentrations of gases such as radioactive radon would increase.
Geological methods of extending the seismicity
record back from the present also are being explored. Field studies indicate
that the sequence of surface ruptures along major active faults associated with
large earthquakes can sometimes be constructed. Liquefaction effects preserved
in beds of sand and peat may provide evidence--when radiometric dating methods
are used--for large "paleoearthquakes" extending back for more than
1,000 years.
Less well-grounded precursory phenomena,
particularly earthquake lights and animal behaviour, sometimes draw more public
attention than those discussed above. Many reports of unusual lights in the sky
and abnormal animal behaviour preceding earthquakes are known to seismologists,
mostly in anecdotal form. Both these phenomena are usually explained in terms
of a release of gases prior to earthquakes and electric and acoustic stimuli of
various types. At present there is no definitive experimental evidence to
support claims that animals sometimes sense the coming of an earthquake.
Methods of reducing earthquake hazards
Considerable work has been done in seismology to
explain the characteristics of the recorded ground motions in earthquakes. Such
knowledge is needed to predict ground motions in future earthquakes so that
earthquake-resistant structures can be designed. Although earthquakes cause
death and destruction through such secondary effects as landslides, tsunamis,
fires, and fault rupture, the greatest losses--both in lives and property--result
from the collapse of man-made surface and subsurface structures during the
violent shaking of the ground. Accordingly, the most effective way to mitigate
the destructiveness of earthquakes from an engineering standpoint is to design
and construct structures capable of withstanding strong ground motions.
Most elastic waves recorded close to an extended
fault source are complicated and difficult to interpret uniquely. Understanding
such near-source motion can be viewed as a three-part problem. The first part
stems from the generation of elastic waves by the slipping fault as the moving
rupture sweeps out an area of slip along the fault plane within a given time.
The pattern of waves produced is dependent on a finite number of parameters,
such as fault dimension and rupture velocity. Elastic waves of various types
radiate from the vicinity of the moving rupture in all directions. The geometry
and frictional properties of the fault critically affect the pattern of
radiation from it.
The second part of the problem concerns the
passage of the waves through the intervening rocks to the site and the effect
of geological studies. The third part involves the conditions at the recording
site itself, such as topography and highly attenuating soils. All these questions
must be considered when an evaluation is being made of likely earthquake
effects at a site of any proposed structure.
Experience has shown that accelerograms have a
variable pattern in detail, but most have regular shapes in general (except in
the case of strongly multiple earthquakes). In a strong horizontal shaking of
the ground (acceleration, velocity, and displacement), there is an initial
segment of motion made up mainly of P waves, which frequently manifest
themselves strongly in the vertical motion. This is followed by the onset of S
waves, often associated with a longer period pulse related to the near-site
fault slip or fling.
After the S onset there is enhanced shaking that
consists of a mixture of S and P waves, but the S motions become dominant as
the duration increases. Later, in the horizontal component, surface waves
dominate, mixed with some S-body waves. Depending on the distance of the site
from the fault and the structure of the intervening rocks and soils, surface
waves are spread out into long trains.
In many areas seismic expectancy maps or risk
maps are now available for planning purposes. The anticipated intensity of
ground shaking is represented by a number called the effective peak
acceleration (EPA).
In order to avoid weaknesses found in earlier
earthquake risk maps, the following general principles are usually adopted
today: (1) the map should take into account not only the size but also the
frequency of earthquakes; (2) the broad regionalization pattern should use as a
data base historical seismicity, major tectonic trends, acceleration
attenuation curves, and intensity reports; (3) regionalization should be
defined by means of contour lines with design parameters referred to ordered
numbers on neighbouring contour lines (this procedure minimizes sensitivity
concerning the exact location of boundary lines between separate zones); (4)
the map should be simple and not attempt to microzone the region; and (5) the
mapped contoured surface should not contain discontinuities, so that the level
of hazard progresses gradually and in order across any profile drawn on the
map.
Developing structural designs that are able to
resist the forces generated by seismic waves can be achieved either by
following building codes based on risk maps or by appropriate methods of
analysis. Many countries reserve theoretical structural analyses for the
larger, more costly or critical buildings to be constructed in seismically
active regions, while simply requiring that ordinary structures conform to
local building codes.
Economic realities usually determine the goal,
not of preventing all damage in all earthquakes, but of minimizing damage in
moderate, more common earthquakes and ensuring no major collapse at the
strongest intensities. An essential part of what goes into engineering
decisions on design and into the development and revision of
earthquake-resistant design codes is therefore seismological, involving
measurement of strong seismic waves, field studies of intensity and damage, and
the probability of earthquake occurrence.
Exploration of the Earth's interior with seismic
waves
Seismological methods and earthquake tomography
Seismological data on the Earth's deep structure
come from several sources. These include P and S waves in earthquakes and
nuclear explosions, the dispersion of surface waves from distant earthquakes,
and vibrations of the whole Earth from large earthquakes.
One of the major aims of seismology is to infer
the minimum set of properties of the Earth's interior that will explain
recorded wave trains in detail. Notwithstanding the tremendous progress made in
the exploration of the Earth's deep structure during the first half of the 20th
century, realization of this goal was severely limited until the 1960s because
of the laborious effort required to evaluate theoretical models and to process
the large amounts of seismological data recorded. The application of high-speed
computers with their enormous storage and rapid retrieval capabilities opened
the way for major advances in both theoretical work and data handling.
Since the mid-1970s researchers have studied
realistic models of the Earth's structure that include continental and oceanic
boundaries, mountains, and alluvial valleys rather than simple structures such
as those involving variation only with depth. They also have resorted to
statistical analyses that entail the simultaneous analyses of worldwide
recordings of earthquake waves. In addition, various developments have
benefited observational seismology.
For example, the implications of seismic
exploratory techniques developed by the petroleum industry (e.g., seismic
reflection) have been recognized and the procedures adopted. (For a discussion
of these techniques, see exploration: Exploration of the Earth's surface and
interior.) Equally significant has been the application of graphical methods to
the exploration of the Earth's deep structure. This has been made possible by
the development of minicomputers and microprocessors with peripheral display
equipment.
The major method for determining the structure
of the Earth's deep interior is the detailed analysis of seismograms of seismic
waves. (It is of interest that such earthquake readings also provide close
estimates of wave velocities, density, and elastic and inelastic parameters in
the Earth.) The primary procedure is to measure the travel times of various
wave types, such as P and S, from their source to the recording seismograph.
First, however, identification of each wave type with its ray path through the
Earth must be made.
In Figure 2 seismic rays for many paths of P and
S waves leaving the earthquake focus F are shown. Rays corresponding to waves
that have suffered reflection at the Earth's outer surface (or possibly at one
of the interior discontinuity surfaces) are denoted as PP, PPP, SS, SSS, PS,
SP, PPS, etc. For example, PS corresponds to a wave that is of P type before
surface reflection and of S type afterward. In addition, there are rays such as
pPP, sPP, and sPS, the symbols p and s corresponding to an initial ascent to
the outer surface as P or S waves, respectively. PdP is the P wave reflected
from a discontinuity depth d kilometres in the upper part of the Earth.
An especially important class of rays is
associated with a discontinuity surface that occurs at a depth of about 2,900
kilometres below the outer surface separating the central core of the Earth
from the mantle. The symbol c is used to indicate an upward reflection at this
discontinuity.
Thus if a P wave travels down from a focus to
the discontinuity surface in question, the upward reflection into an S wave is
recorded at an observing station as the ray PcS and similarly with PcP, ScS,
and ScP. The symbol K is used to denote the part (of P type) of the path of a
wave that passes through the central core.
Thus, the ray SKS corresponds to a wave that
starts as an S wave, is refracted into the central core as a P wave, and is
refracted back into the mantle wherein it finally emerges as an S wave. Such
rays as PKKP correspond to waves that have suffered an internal reflection at
the boundary of the central core.
The discovery of the existence of an inner core
in 1936 by the Danish seismologist Inge Lehmann made it necessary to introduce
additional basic symbols. For paths of waves inside the central core, the
symbols i and I are used analogously to c and K for the whole Earth; therefore
i indicates reflection upward at the boundary between the outer and inner
portions of the central core, and I corresponds to the part (of P type) of the
path of a wave that lies inside the inner portion. Thus, for instance,
discrimination needs to be made between the rays PKP, PKiKP, and PKIKP.
The first of these corresponds to a wave that
has entered the outer portion of the central core but has not reached the inner
portion; the second to one that has been reflected upward at the boundary
between the two portions; and the third to one that has penetrated into the
inner portion.
By combining the symbols p, s, P, S, c, K, i, I,
and d in various ways, notation is developed for all the main rays associated
with body earthquake waves. The symbol J has been introduced to correspond to S
waves in the inner core, should evidence be found for such waves.
Finally, the use of times of travel along rays
to infer hidden structure is analogous to the use of X rays in medical
tomography. The method involves reconstructing an image of internal anomalies
from measurements made at the outer surface. Nowadays, hundreds of thousands of
travel times of P and S waves are available in earthquake catalogs for the
tomographic imaging of the Earth's interior and the mapping of internal
structure.
Structure of the Earth's interior
Studies with earthquake recordings have given a
picture inside the Earth of, on average, a solid but layered mantle about 2,900
kilometres thick, which in places lies within 10 kilometres of the surface
under the oceans. The thin rock layer surrounding the mantle is the crust,
whose lower boundary is called the Mohorovicic Discontinuity.
In normal continental regions of 30- to
40-kilometre thickness, there is usually a superficial low-velocity sedimentary
layer underlain by a zone in which seismic velocity increases with depth. This
may be followed by a layer in which P-wave velocities in some places fall from
6 to 5.6 kilometres per second. The middle part of the crust is characterized
by a heterogeneous zone with P velocities of nearly 6 to 6.3 kilometres per
second. The lowest layer of the crust (about 10 kilometres thick) has
significantly higher P velocities ranging up to nearly 7 kilometres per second.
In the deep ocean, under a sedimentary layer of
about one-kilometre thickness, the lower layer of the thin oceanic crust is
inferred to consist of basalt, which formed where extrusions of basaltic magma
at mid-ocean ridges have been added to the upper part of lithospheric plates as
they spread away from the ridge crests. This crustal layer cools as it moves
away from the ridge crest, and its seismic velocities increase correspondingly.
Below the mantle lies a 2,255-kilometre-thick
shell, which seismic waves show to have the properties of a liquid. At the very
centre of the planet is a separate solid core, with a radius of 1,216
kilometres. Recent work with observed seismic waves has revealed fine structural
details within the main shells inside the Earth, especially the crust and
lithosphere. These regional variations are important in explaining the dynamic
history of the planet.
Long-period oscillations of the globe
Sometimes earthquakes are large enough to cause
the whole Earth to ring like a bell. The deepest tone of vibration of the
planet is one of 54 minutes. Knowledge of these vibrations has come from a
remarkable extension in the range of periods of ground movements that can be
recorded by very long-period seismographs, thus allowing the interval in
earthquake wave periods to be filled in: from ordinary P waves with periods of
a few seconds to vibrations with periods on the order of 12 and 24 hours such
as those that occur in Earth tidal movements.
The measurements of the vibrations of the whole
Earth provide important additional data on the properties of the interior of
the planet. It should be emphasized that these free vibrations are set up by
the energy release of the earthquake source but continue for many hours and
sometimes even days. For an elastic sphere like the Earth two types of
vibrations are known to be possible.
In one type, called S modes or spheroidal
vibrations, the motions of the elements of the sphere have components along the
radius as well as along the tangent. In the second type, which are designated
as T modes or torsional vibrations, there are shear but no radial
displacements. The nomenclature is nS and nT, where the letters n and are
related to the surfaces in the vibration at which there is zero motion. The
suffix n gives a count of the number of internal zero-motion (nodal) surfaces
and the suffix indicates the number of surface nodal lines.
Several hundred types of S and T vibrations have
been identified and the associated periods measured. In a smaller number of
cases, the amplitude of the ground motion in the vibrations has been determined
for particular earthquakes, and, more importantly, the attenuation of each
component vibration has been measured. The measure of this decay constant is
called the quality factor Q. The greater the value of Q, the less is the wave
or vibration damping. Typically, for oS10 and oT10, the Q values are about 250.
The rate of decay of the vibrations of the whole
Earth with the passage of time can be seen in Figure 3, where they appear
superimposed for 20 hours of the 12-hour tidal deformations of the Earth. At
the bottom of Figure 3, these vibrations have been split up into a series of
peaks, each with a definite frequency, like the spectrum of light. Such a
spectrum indicates the relative amplitude of each harmonic present in the free
oscillations. If the physical properties of the Earth's interior were known,
all these individual peaks could be calculated directly. Instead, the internal
structure must be estimated from the observed peaks.
Recent research has shown that observations of
long-period oscillations of the Earth discriminate fairly finely between
different Earth models. In applying the observations to improve the resolution
and precision of such representations of the planet's internal structure, a
considerable number of Earth models are set up and all the periods of their
free oscillations are computed and checked against the observations. Models can
then be steadily eliminated until only a small range remains. In practice, the work
starts with existing models; efforts are made to amend them by successive steps
until full compatibility with the observations is achieved within the
uncertainties of the observations. Even so, the resulting computed Earth
structure is not a unique solution to the problem.
- Encyclopedia Britannica