tectonic Flashcards

1
Q

what factors affect risk of hazards

A
  • urbanisation
  • poverty
  • farming
  • climate change
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2
Q

tectonic plates and distribution of volcanoes

A
  • crust is split into 7 major plates
    -oceanic crust is dense, thin, younger
  • continental crust is less dense, thick, older

belts along plate margins (like the ring of fire)

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3
Q

Constructive margin

A
  • 2 plates move apart
  • magma forces its way to the surface
  • as it breaks the crust, it causes EQ
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4
Q

destructive margin

A
  • 2 plates move towards each other
    -dense oceanic plate subducts beneath the less dense, continental plate
  • friction causes strong EQs
  • sinking oceanic plate creates sticky, gas-rich magma
  • results in steep-sided composite volcanoes which erupt violently
  • where 2 continental plates meet there is no subduction
  • the crust crumples and lifts to form mountains
  • powerful EQs can be triggered
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5
Q

conservative margin

A
  • 2 plates move past each other at different rates
  • friction between plates build stresses and trigger EQ when they slip
  • no volcanoes because there is no magma
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6
Q

EQ Nepal, April 2015

A

Wealth
- LIC

cause
- Indo-Australian plate colliding with Eurasian plate

size
7.9

primary effects
- 9,000 killed
-20,000 injured
- 8,000,000 affected
- destruction of infrastructure
- power, water, sanitation, communications cut
- $5bil damage
- 1.4mil people needed food, water and shelter for weeks

secondary impacts
- communities cut off by landslides and avalanches
- avalanches on Mt Everest killed 19
- flooding caused by landslide blocked rivers

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7
Q

responses in Nepal

A

immediate
- overseas aid included NGOs like Oxfam
- aid included helicopters for search/rescue and supply drops on remote areas like Everest
- 300,000 people migrated from Kathmandu for shelter/support
- field hospitals set up by organisations e.g. The Red Cross

long-term
- roads repaired, landslides cleared, flood lakes drained
- international conference to seek technical/financial support
- UNESCO is working with the government to restore 700 damaged temples, palaces and museums

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8
Q

EQ Japan 2011

A

wealth
-HIC

cause
- slippage at the destructive plate margin between North American Plate and Pacific plate

size
9.0

primary impacts
- 3-5 mins of strong ground shaking caused injuries and deaths
- thousands of homes destroyed in Fukushima
- roads and rail lines damaged, electricity, water and sewage disrupted in Tohoku
- 4mil without electricity in north-east
- 1.5 mil without water
- dam burst in Fukushima

secondary impacts
- 10m high tsunami waves
-caused 18,000 deaths and 500,000 homeless
- 560km^2 of coastal land flooded
- waves destroyed infrastructure/ports
- explosions at Fukushima nuclear power plant led to evacuation of 100,000
- $235bil total damage

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9
Q

Japan responses

A

immediate
- search and rescue teams from Japan and abroad
- 100,000 members of Japanese Self-Defence force
- 500,000 evacuated to high ground before tsunami
- many had homes destroyed and needed emergency shelter, food, water
- roads and railway restored within a few weeks
- power soon restored but supply was intermittent due to explosion

long-term
- reconstruction design council devised long-term plan for the region
- most debris had been cleared by early 2015
- by 2020, 30,000 units of public housing had been completed
- 2013- upgraded tsunami warning system was launched with more accurate forecasts

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10
Q

why do people live at risk of tectonic hazards

A
  • poor people have no choice- money, food, family are seen as more important
  • EQs and volcanic eruptions are rare
  • EQ-resistant building designs reduce risk
  • effective monitoring of volcanoes/tsunami waves allow evacuation warnings to be given
  • plate margins often coincide with favourable areas for settlement and trade like flat, coastal areas
  • some people have no experience of knowledge of the risks
  • volcanoes can bring benefits such as fertile soils, mineral deposits
  • EQ fault lines can allow water to reach the surface
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11
Q

Iceland

A

iceland straddles the Mid-Atlantic ridge with volcanic eruptions every 5 years

  • Naturally occurring hot water and superheated steam provides hot water and central heating for 90% of all buildings
  • geothermal energy generates 25% of Iceland’s electricity
  • volcanic rocks are used in road and building construction
  • iceland’s dramatic landscapes with waterfalls, hot springs, lava fields, volcanoes, glaciers support large tourism industry
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12
Q

how can risks from tectonic hazards be reduced?

A

Monitoring
- volcanoes are monitored using remote sensing, seismicity, ground deformation
- some events may occur before an EQ like microquakes before the main tremor, bulging of the ground, raised groundwater levels

Prediction
- volcano monitoring is now allowing accurate evacuation
- prediction is impossible for EQs but probability can be determined

Protection
- earth embankments/explosive are used to divert lava flows
- EQ drills help keep people alert and prepared, EQ resistant construction

Planning
- Volcano risk assessment and hazard mapping identify areas to practice evacuation/ restrict building
- EQ risk assessment and hazard mapping to identify areas to protect buildings and infrastructure

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