Скачать презентацию Magnitude 2 9 earthquake Winchester Hampshire UK Tuesday Скачать презентацию Magnitude 2 9 earthquake Winchester Hampshire UK Tuesday

a8c64670845d4c8a077b88f8f76903bc.ppt

  • Количество слайдов: 6

Magnitude 2. 9 earthquake Winchester, Hampshire, UK Tuesday, 27 January, 2015 at 18: 30: Magnitude 2. 9 earthquake Winchester, Hampshire, UK Tuesday, 27 January, 2015 at 18: 30: 17. 6 UTC A magnitude 2. 9 earthquake occurred close to the city of Winchester, in Hampshire, on 27 th April 2014. The earthquake occurred at a depth of 3 km (~2 miles). Shaking was felt by people living in surrounding towns and villages. The earthquake was felt up to 60 km away from the epicentre. The UK typically experiences around 26 M 2. 0 -2. 9 earthquakes every year.

Magnitude 2. 9 earthquake Winchester, Hampshire, UK Tuesday, 27 January, 2015 at 18: 30: Magnitude 2. 9 earthquake Winchester, Hampshire, UK Tuesday, 27 January, 2015 at 18: 30: 17. 6 UTC Where was the earthquake felt? Felt only by a few people at best, especially on the upper floors of buildings. Delicately suspended objects may swing. III. Slight Felt quite noticeably by people indoors, especially on the upper floors of buildings. Many to do not recognise it as an earthquake. Standing motor cars may rock slightly. Vibration similar to the passing of a truck. Duration estimated. Felt indoors by many people, outdoors by a few people during the day. At night, some awakened. V. Rather Strong Felt outside by most, may not be felt by some people in non-favourable conditions. Dishes and windows may break and large bells will ring. Vibrations like train passing close to house. Felt by all; many frightened and run outdoors, walk unsteadily. Windows, dishes, glassware broken; books fall off shelves; some heavy furniture moved or overturned; a few instances of fallen plaster. Damage slight. VII. Very Strong Difficult to stand; furniture broken; damage negligible in building of good design and construction; slight to moderate in well-built ordinary structures; considerable damage in poorly built or badly designed structures; some chimneys broken. Noticed by people driving motor cars. VIII. Destructive Damage slight in specially designed structures; considerable in ordinary substantial buildings with partial collapse. Damage great in poorly built structures. Fall of chimneys, factory stacks, columns, monuments, walls. Heavy furniture moved. IX. Violent General panic; damage considerable in poorly designed structures, well designed frame structures thrown out of plumb. Damage great in substantial buildings, with partial collapse. Buildings shifted off foundations. X. Intense Some well build wooden structures destroyed; most masonry and frame structures destroyed with foundation. Rails bent. XI. Extreme Few, if any masonry structures remain standing. Bridges destroyed. Rails bent greatly. XII. Cataclysmic Location of shaking reports (image courtesy BGS) II. Weak VI. Strong The strongest recorded felt intensity was Intensity III (slight shaking). Not felt by many people unless in favourable conditions. IV. Moderate Most shaking was felt within a 10 -15 km radius of the earthquake’s epicentre. The furthest felt reports came from Southampton (20 km to the south), Newbury (30 km to the north) and Bournemouth (60 km to the southwest). I. Instrumental Total destruction – everything is destroyed. Lines of sight and level distorted. Objects thrown into the air. The ground moves in waves or ripples. Large amounts of rock move position. Landscape altered, or leveled by several meters. In some cases, even the routes of rivers are changed. Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale

Magnitude 2. 9 earthquake Winchester, Hampshire, UK Tuesday, 27 January, 2015 at 18: 30: Magnitude 2. 9 earthquake Winchester, Hampshire, UK Tuesday, 27 January, 2015 at 18: 30: 17. 6 UTC Past earthquakes in the region Small earthquakes in the UK are not unusual, although the south and south-east areas of the UK are historically some of the country’s less seismically active regions. The largest recorded earthquake in this region of was a magnitude 3. 0 event in 1982, that occurred 30 km to the northeast of the January 2015 earthquake M 3. 0 earthquake, July 1982 Historic seismicity (since 1970) recorded in the region. The earthquake epicentre is indicated by the red star. Earthquake locations from the BGS catalogue.

Magnitude 2. 9 earthquake Winchester, Hampshire, UK Tuesday, 27 January, 2015 at 18: 30: Magnitude 2. 9 earthquake Winchester, Hampshire, UK Tuesday, 27 January, 2015 at 18: 30: 17. 6 UTC What caused this earthquake to occur? The UK does not lie on an active tectonic plate boundary (one of its nearest plate boundaries is the Mid-Atlantic Ridge – located some 2000 km to the west). However, the stresses from these plate boundaries can be transferred to the middle of the plates. This stress is sometimes released along pre-existing faults within the crust of the Eurasian tectonic plate. Earthquakes in the UK can also be caused by gradual uplift of the crust since the last ice age. Many of the UK’s ancient faults are not seen on the surface – these are known as‘blind faults’. The lack of large earthquakes in the UK also means we are unable to identify every fault in the UK that could cause an earthquake. N. American plate Mid-Atlantic Ridge Eurasian plate Alpine – Pyrenees mountain belt Africa – Eurasia collision zone Map of major tectonic boundaries in Western Europe

Magnitude 2. 9 earthquake Winchester, Hampshire, UK Tuesday, 27 January, 2015 at 18: 30: Magnitude 2. 9 earthquake Winchester, Hampshire, UK Tuesday, 27 January, 2015 at 18: 30: 17. 6 UTC Recordings of the earthquake from the British Geological Survey seismometer network By finding the difference in arrival times between the P- and S-wave arrivals at different seismic stations, we can calculate the distance of the earthquake from each receiver (circles). If we do this for several stations (triangles), we can determine the approximate epicentre of the earthquake (red star) by finding the common intersection point of these circles.

Magnitude 2. 9 earthquake Winchester, Hampshire, UK Tuesday, 27 January, 2015 at 18: 30: Magnitude 2. 9 earthquake Winchester, Hampshire, UK Tuesday, 27 January, 2015 at 18: 30: 17. 6 UTC Find out more … • BGS webpage for this earthquake http: //www. earthquakes. bgs. ac. uk/earthquakes/recent_events/20150127183022. html#page=summ ary • BGS (British Geological Survey) – seismology and earthquakes – frequently asked questions http: //www. earthquakes. bgs. ac. uk/education/faqs/faq_index. html • BBC News article on this earthquake -england-hampshire-31009707 • IRIS (Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology) – learning about earthquakes http: //www. iris. edu/hq/programs/education_and_outreach/students • UK School Seismology Project – classroom activities, videos and support documents http: //www. bgs. ac. uk/schoolseismology/home. html • USGS (United States Geological Survey) – FAQs, glossary, posters, animations http: //earthquake. usgs. gov/learn/ • EMSC (European Mediterranean Seismological Centre) csem. org/ http: //www. bbc. co. uk/news/uk http: //www. emsc-