review for quiz Flashcards

1
Q

slow type of fault movement.

A

CREEP

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2
Q

The branch of science concerned with earthquakes and related phenomena.

A

SEISMOLOGY

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3
Q

It refers to the block that sits on the fault plane

A

HANGING WALL

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4
Q

It refers to the fault plane that is exposed above the ground.

A

FAULT SCARP

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5
Q

Polished and striated surfaces on fault planes caused by the movement of rocks against each other.

A

SLICKENLINES

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6
Q

A region where the Earth’s lithosphere is being stretched, leading to the formation of normal faults and often the development of rift valleys.

A

RIFT ZONE

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7
Q

he process by which one tectonic plate is pushed over another during a collision, leading to the formation f large thrust faults and the emplacement of ophiolite complexes onto continental crust.

A

OBDUCTION

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8
Q

A specific type of strike-slip fault that occurs at the boundary between two tectonic plates.

A

TRANSFORM

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9
Q
  • A zone between two segments of a strike-slip fault where the fault traces do not directly align, creating an offset in the fault system.
A

STEPOVER FAULT

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10
Q

The study of how materials deform under applied forces, often used to describe the behavior of rocks during faulting.

A

RHEOLOGY

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11
Q

The point in the rock’s zone of weakness, where the breaking of the rocks first starts, and seismic energy is released.

A

HYPOCENTER/FOCUS

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12
Q

The waves/impacts made by a stone in its entry point on the surface of water.

A

RIPPLE

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13
Q

A mass of snow, rock, ice, and soil that tumbles down a mountain, usually because of earthquake.

A

AVALANCHE

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14
Q

The term for the process of breaking larger rocks into smaller pieces due to stress from an earthquake.

A

FRAGMENTATION

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15
Q

The height of the wave of the seismogram.

A

AMPLITUDE

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16
Q

It describes how the random lines generated by the seismogram looks like.

A

WIGGLY

17
Q

One of the pioneers of Moment Magnitude Scale, a scale that is more accurate on a large-scale earthquake.

A

HIROO KARAMORI

18
Q

Smaller earthquakes that occur before a larger main earthquake.

A

FORESHOCKS

19
Q

The frequency and distribution of earthquakes in a particular region over a specific time period.

A

SEISMICITY

20
Q

An area where one tectonic plate is being pushed beneath another into the Earth’s mantle, often associated with powerful megathrust earthquakes.

A

SUBUDUCTION

21
Q

A vibration or disturbance that travels from one point to another and carries energy.

A

WAVE PROPAGATION

22
Q

They rise and fall perpendicular to the direction traveled by the waves.

A

TRANSVERSE

23
Q

They compress and expand like a spring in the direction of wave’s pathway.

A

LONGTITUDINAL

24
Q

The bending of waves as they pass through materials with varying densities, particularly in the Earth’s interior.

A

SEISMIC REFRACTION

25
Q

The graphical representation of the motion of the ground as recorded by seismometers during an earthquake.

A

WAVEFORM

26
Q

The process where saturated soil temporarily loses its strength during an earthquake.

A

LIQUEFACTION

27
Q

Deformation of rocks due to stress, leading to earthquakes.

A

STRAIN

28
Q

The breaking of the Earth’s surface along a fault during an earthquake.

A

SURFACE RUPTURE

29
Q

The rigid, outermost rocky shell of a terrestrial planet or natural satellite.

A

LITHOSPHERE

30
Q

The deepness within the Earth where an earthquake’s energy is released, measured from the Earth’s surface to the earthquake’s origin.

A

FOCAL DEPTH