ကသဳတိ

နူ ဝဳကဳပဳဒဳယာ

ကသဳတိ (ဗွဲမဂၠိုင် ဟီု တိချဳ) (အၚ်္ဂလိက်: earthquake ) ဂှ် ဒှ်အရာ ဗလးတိ မုက်လတူ ချဳတိုန် မွဲတဲဓဝ် ဟိုတ်နူကဵု အသိင်ဒြဟတ် သၟောန်တၟအ်ဂလး (lithoshere) ဇီုပေါတ် ရေင်သကအ်တုဲ လပှ်ကသဳတိ (seismic wave) က္တဵုဒှ်ကၠုင်ရ။ ကသဳတိဂှ် ဗဒှ်ကဵု အသိင် ကဆံင်နာနာ နူကဵု မနွံအသိင်သာသာ မုဟွံတီကေတ်၊ စဵုကဵု အသိင်မသကာတ်မြဟ် မဓရိုဟ် ကလာင်ပတိုန် ကိရိယာ၊ မၞိဟ် လတူကျာ၊ ပလီုသလေက်ထောအ် အလုံဍုင်မွဲမာန်ရ။

ကသဳတိ က္တဵုဒှ်မ္ဂး ပ္ဍဲကဵု ဗလးတိ မုက်လတူဂှ် ချဳတိုန်၊ ဟွံသေင်မ္ဂး ခတဝ်တိုန် ဟွံသေင်မ္ဂး ဆုဲပြံင်အာတအ် က္တဵုဒှ်ကၠုင်မာန်ရ။ ယဝ်ရ ကသဳတိ က္တဵုဒှ် ပ္ဍဲၜဳမ္ဂး ဍာ်ၜဳကလိုက်တုဲ ၜဳကလိုက် မကော်ဂး သူနာမဳ က္တဵုဒှ်ကၠုင်မာန်ရ။ လဆောဝ်မ္ဂး ကသဳတိဂှ် ဗဒှ်ကဵု ကသုဲတိ (landslides) ဗလးတိ မုက်လတူဂှ် ဆုဲကဆေတ်ပြံင်အာလေဝ် ဒှ်မာန်ကီုရ။

ကသဳတိ ဟွံသေင်မ္ဂး အရေဝ်မန်ခေတ်လၟုဟ် (ဝါ) အရေဝ်အရာပ် တိချဳဂှ် အရာတိမချဳ သီုဖအိုတ်ဂှ် ကော်ဒၟံင်ရ။ သီုကဵု ဟိုတ်နူသဘာဝ ဟွံသေင်၊ ဟိုတ်နူမၞိဟ်မကၠောန်ပတုဲ လပှ်ကသဳတိ က္တဵုဒှ်ကၠုင်ဂှ်လေဝ် ကော်စဒၟံင်ကီုရ။


ကသဳတိ မကတဵုဒှ် နူသဘာဝ[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

ဟိုတ်ကသဳတိ ပိသာ်:
A. ကဆေတ် (Strike-slip)
B. ကဆေဝ် (Normal)
C. ကဆံင် (Reverse)

ကရောင်ကသဳတိ (ဝါ) ဂၠံင်တိချဳ မကော်ဂး နကဵု ဘာသာအင်္ဂလိက် Tectonic earthquakes ဂှ် နွံဒၟံင် ဒၞာဲဗွဲမဂၠိုင် ပ္ဍဲကဵု ဂၠးတိဝွံရ။ ပ္ဍဲဒၞာဲ ကရေက်ဂၠးတိဂမၠိုင် မစုက်လုက်ရေင်သကအ်တအ်ဂှ် ဒှ်ကရောင်ကသဳတိရ။အခိင်ကာလ သၟောန်တၟအ်ဂလးၜါ ပေါတ်ရေင်သကအ် ကဆေတ်ရေင်သကအ်၊ ဟွံသေင်မ္ဂး ကရေက်ဂၠးတိမွဲဂှ် ကဆေဝ်သဝ်စှ်ေ၊ ဟွံသေင်မ္ဂး ကရေက်ဂၠးတိမွဲဂှ် ကဆံင်သၠုင်တိုန်မ္ဂး ကသဳတိ က္တဵုဒှ်ကၠုင်ရ။ လဆောဝ်မ္ဂး ဟိုတ်နူအသိင်ဟွံထတ်တုဲ ဇွိုင်လပှ်ကသဳတိဂှ် ဟွံတိုန်စိုပ် စဵုကဵု ဗလးတိ မုက်လတူ၊ လဆောဝ်တိုန်စိုပ် ညိည၊ အသိင်ထတ် ဇွိုင်လပှ်ကသဳတိ ကၠုင်တက်စိုပ် ဗလးတိ မုက်လတူထတ်မ္ဂး အသိင်ကသဳတိ ထတ်ရ။ [၁]

ဟိုတ်ကသဳတိ မဂွံကတဵုဒှ်[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

အဓိက ဟိုတ်ကသဳတိ မဂွံက္တဵုဒှ် နွံပိသာ်။ သီုပိသာ်ဂှ် က္တဵုဒှ်ကၠုင် ဟိုတ်နူ ဂတှ်ေတိ ပေါတ်ဒးရေင်သကအ် မတွဟ်ဂး သၟောန်ဂတှ်ေတိၜါ ကဆေတ်အာ၊ ဟွံသေင်မ္ဂး သၟောန်ဂတှ်ေတိၜါဂှ် မွဲဂှ် ကဆေဝ်သဝ်စှ်ေ၊ မွဲပၠန်ဂှ် သၟောန်ဂတှ်ေတိၜါ မွဲလပါ်ဂှ် ကဆံင်သၠုင်တိုန်။ There are three main types of fault, all of which may cause an interplate earthquake: normal, reverse (thrust), and strike-slip. Normal and reverse faulting are examples of dip-slip, where the displacement along the fault is in the direction of dip and where movement on them involves a vertical component. Many earthquakes are caused by movement on faults that have components of both dip-slip and strike-slip; this is known as oblique slip. The topmost, brittle part of the Earth's crust, and the cool slabs of the tectonic plates that are descending into the hot mantle, are the only parts of our planet that can store elastic energy and release it in fault ruptures. Rocks hotter than about 300 °C (572 °F) flow in response to stress; they do not rupture in earthquakes.[၂][၃] The maximum observed lengths of ruptures and mapped faults (which may break in a single rupture) are approximately 1,000 km (620 mi). Examples are the earthquakes in Alaska (1957), Chile (1960), and Sumatra (2004), all in subduction zones. The longest earthquake ruptures on strike-slip faults, like the San Andreas Fault (1857, 1906), the North Anatolian Fault in Turkey (1939), and the Denali Fault in Alaska (2002), are about half to one third as long as the lengths along subducting plate margins, and those along normal faults are even shorter.

Normal faults[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Normal faults occur mainly in areas where the crust is being extended such as a divergent boundary. Earthquakes associated with normal faults are generally less than magnitude 7. Maximum magnitudes along many normal faults are even more limited because many of them are located along spreading centers, as in Iceland, where the thickness of the brittle layer is only about 6 kiloမဳတာs (3.7 mi)*.[၄][၅]

Reverse faults[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Reverse faults occur in areas where the crust is being shortened such as at a convergent boundary. Reverse faults, particularly those along convergent plate boundaries, are associated with the most powerful earthquakes, megathrust earthquakes, including almost all of those of magnitude 8 or more. Megathrust earthquakes are responsible for about 90% of the total seismic moment released worldwide.[၆]

Strike-slip faults[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Strike-slip faults are steep structures where the two sides of the fault slip horizontally past each other; transform boundaries are a particular type of strike-slip fault. Strike-slip faults, particularly continental transforms, can produce major earthquakes up to about magnitude 8. Strike-slip faults tend to be oriented near vertically, resulting in an approximate width of 10 km (6.2 mi) within the brittle crust.[၇] Thus, earthquakes with magnitudes much larger than 8 are not possible.

Aerial photo of the San Andreas Fault in the Carrizo Plain, northwest of Los Angeles

In addition, there exists a hierarchy of stress levels in the three fault types. Thrust faults are generated by the highest, strike-slip by intermediate, and normal faults by the lowest stress levels.[၈] This can easily be understood by considering the direction of the greatest principal stress, the direction of the force that "pushes" the rock mass during the faulting. In the case of normal faults, the rock mass is pushed down in a vertical direction, thus the pushing force (greatest principal stress) equals the weight of the rock mass itself. In the case of thrusting, the rock mass "escapes" in the direction of the least principal stress, namely upward, lifting the rock mass, and thus, the overburden equals the least principal stress. Strike-slip faulting is intermediate between the other two types described above. This difference in stress regime in the three faulting environments can contribute to differences in stress drop during faulting, which contributes to differences in the radiated energy, regardless of fault dimensions.

Energy released[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

For every unit increase in magnitude, there is a roughly thirtyfold increase in the energy released. For instance, an earthquake of magnitude 6.0 releases approximately 32 times more energy than a 5.0 magnitude earthquake and a 7.0 magnitude earthquake releases 1,000 times more energy than a 5.0 magnitude earthquake. An 8.6 magnitude earthquake releases the same amount of energy as 10,000 atomic bombs of the size used in World War II.[၉]

This is so because the energy released in an earthquake, and thus its magnitude, is proportional to the area of the fault that ruptures[၁၀] and the stress drop. Therefore, the longer the length and the wider the width of the faulted area, the larger the resulting magnitude. The most important parameter controlling the maximum earthquake magnitude on a fault, however, is not the maximum available length, but the available width because the latter varies by a factor of 20. Along converging plate margins, the dip angle of the rupture plane is very shallow, typically about 10 degrees.[၁၁] Thus, the width of the plane within the top brittle crust of the Earth can become 50–100 km (31–62 mi) (Japan, 2011; Alaska, 1964), making the most powerful earthquakes possible.

Shallow-focus and deep-focus earthquakes[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Collapsed Gran Hotel building in the San Salvador metropolis, after the shallow 1986 San Salvador earthquake

The majority of tectonic earthquakes originate in the ring of fire at depths not exceeding tens of kilometers. Earthquakes occurring at a depth of less than 70 km (43 mi) are classified as "shallow-focus" earthquakes, while those with a focal-depth between 70 and 300 km (43 and 186 mi) are commonly termed "mid-focus" or "intermediate-depth" earthquakes. In Subduction zones, where older and colder oceanic crust descends beneath another tectonic plate, deep-focus earthquakes may occur at much greater depths (ranging from 300 to 700 km (190 to 430 mi)).[၁၂] These seismically active areas of subduction are known as Wadati–Benioff zones. Deep-focus earthquakes occur at a depth where the subducted lithosphere should no longer be brittle, due to the high temperature and pressure. A possible mechanism for the generation of deep-focus earthquakes is faulting caused by olivine undergoing a phase transition into a spinel structure.[၁၃]

Earthquakes and volcanic activity[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Earthquakes often occur in volcanic regions and are caused there, both by tectonic faults and the movement of magma in volcanoes. Such earthquakes can serve as an early warning of volcanic eruptions, as during the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens.[၁၄] Earthquake swarms can serve as markers for the location of the flowing magma throughout the volcanoes. These swarms can be recorded by seismometers and tiltmeters (a device that measures ground slope) and used as sensors to predict imminent or upcoming eruptions.[၁၅]

Rupture dynamics[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

A tectonic earthquake begins as an area of initial slip on the fault surface that forms the focus. Once the rupture has initiated, it begins to propagate away from the focus, spreading out along the fault surface. Lateral propagation will continue until either the rupture reaches a barrier, such as the end of a fault segment, or a region on the fault where there is insufficient stress to allow continued rupture. For larger earthquakes, the depth extent of rupture will be constrained downwards by the brittle-ductile transition zone and upwards by the ground surface. The mechanics of this process are poorly understood, because it is difficult either to recreate such rapid movements in a laboratory or to record seismic waves close to a nucleation zone due to strong ground motion.[၁၆]

In most cases the rupture speed approaches, but does not exceed, the shear wave (S-wave) velocity of the surrounding rock. There are a few exceptions to this:

Supershear earthquakes[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Supershear earthquake ruptures are known to have propagated at speeds greater than the S-wave velocity. These have so far all been observed during large strike-slip events. The unusually wide zone of damage caused by the 2001 Kunlun earthquake has been attributed to the effects of the sonic boom developed in such earthquakes.

Slow earthquakes[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Slow earthquake ruptures travel at unusually low velocities. A particularly dangerous form of slow earthquake is the tsunami earthquake, observed where the relatively low felt intensities, caused by the slow propagation speed of some great earthquakes, fail to alert the population of the neighboring coast, as in the 1896 Sanriku earthquake.[၁၆]

Co-seismic overpressuring and effect of pore pressure[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

During an earthquake, high temperatures can develop at the fault plane so increasing pore pressure consequently to vaporization of the ground water already contained within rock.[၁၇][၁၈][၁၉] In the coseismic phase, such increase can significantly affect slip evolution and speed and, furthermore, in the post-seismic phase it can control the Aftershock sequence because, after the main event, pore pressure increase slowly propagates into the surrounding fracture network.[၂၀][၁၉] From the point of view of the Mohr-Coulomb strength theory, an increase in fluid pressure reduces the normal stress acting on the fault plane that holds it in place, and fluids can exert a lubricating effect. As thermal overpressurization may provide positive feedback between slip and strength fall at the fault plane, a common opinion is that it may enhance the faulting process instability. After the mainshock, the pressure gradient between the fault plane and the neighboring rock causes a fluid flow which increases pore pressure in the surrounding fracture networks; such increase may trigger new faulting processes by reactivating adjacent faults, giving rise to aftershocks.[၂၀][၁၉] Analogously, artificial pore pressure increase, by fluid injection in Earth's crust, may induce seismicity.

Tidal forces[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Tides may induce some seismicity.

Earthquake clusters[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Most earthquakes form part of a sequence, related to each other in terms of location and time.[၂၁] Most earthquake clusters consist of small tremors that cause little to no damage, but there is a theory that earthquakes can recur in a regular pattern.[၂၂] Earthquake clustering has been observed, for example, in Parkfield, California where a long term research study is being conducted around the Parkfield earthquake cluster.[၂၃]

Aftershocks[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Magnitude of the Central Italy earthquakes of August and October 2016 and January 2017 and the aftershocks (which continued to occur after the period shown here)

An aftershock is an earthquake that occurs after a previous earthquake, the mainshock. Rapid changes of stress between rocks, and the stress from the original earthquake are the main causes of these aftershocks,[၂၄] along with the crust around the ruptured fault plane as it adjusts to the effects of the mainshock.[၂၁] An aftershock is in the same region of the main shock but always of a smaller magnitude, however they can still be powerful enough to cause even more damage to buildings that were already previously damaged from the mainshock.[၂၄] If an aftershock is larger than the mainshock, the aftershock is redesignated as the mainshock and the originalmain shock is redesignated as a foreshock. Aftershocks are formed as the crust around the displaced fault plane adjusts to the effects of the mainshock.[၂၁]

Earthquake swarms[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Earthquake swarms are sequences of earthquakes striking in a specific area within a short period. They are different from earthquakes followed by a series of aftershocks by the fact that no single earthquake in the sequence is obviously the main shock, so none has a notable higher magnitude than another. An example of an earthquake swarm is the 2004 activity at Yellowstone National Park.[၂၅] In August 2012, a swarm of earthquakes shook Southern California's Imperial Valley, showing the most recorded activity in the area since the 1970s.[၂၆]

Sometimes a series of earthquakes occur in what has been called an earthquake storm, where the earthquakes strike a fault in clusters, each triggered by the shaking or stress redistribution of the previous earthquakes. Similar to aftershocks but on adjacent segments of fault, these storms occur over the course of years, and with some of the later earthquakes as damaging as the early ones. Such a pattern was observed in the sequence of about a dozen earthquakes that struck the North Anatolian Fault in Turkey in the 20th century and has been inferred for older anomalous clusters of large earthquakes in the Middle East.[၂၇][၂၈]

Intensity and magnitude of earthquakes[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Shaking of the earth is a common phenomenon that has been experienced by humans from the earliest of times. Before the development of strong-motion accelerometers, the intensity of a seismic event was estimated based on the observed effects. Magnitude and intensity are not directly related and calculated using different methods. The magnitude of an earthquake is a single value that describes the size of the earthquake at its source. Intensity is the measure of shaking at different locations around the earthquake. Intensity values vary from place to place, depending on distance from the earthquake and underlying rock or soil makeup.[၂၉]

The first scale for measuring earthquake magnitudes was developed by Charles F. Richter in 1935. Subsequent scales (see seismic magnitude scales) have retained a key feature, where each unit represents a ten-fold difference in the amplitude of the ground shaking and a 32-fold difference in energy. Subsequent scales are also adjusted to have approximately the same numeric value within the limits of the scale.[၃၀]

Although the mass media commonly reports earthquake magnitudes as "Richter magnitude" or "Richter scale", standard practice by most seismological authorities is to express an earthquake's strength on the moment magnitude scale, which is based on the actual energy released by an earthquake.[၃၁]

Frequency of occurrence[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

The Messina earthquake and tsunami took as many as 200,000 lives on December 28, 1908, in Sicily and Calabria.[၃၂]

It is estimated that around 500,000 earthquakes occur each year, detectable with current instrumentation. About 100,000 of these can be felt.[၃၃][၃၄] Minor earthquakes occur nearly constantly around the world in places like California and Alaska in the U.S., as well as in El Salvador, Mexico, Guatemala, Chile, Peru, Indonesia, the Philippines, Iran, Pakistan, the Azores in Portugal, Turkey, New Zealand, Greece, Italy, India, Nepal and Japan.[၃၅] Larger earthquakes occur less frequently, the relationship being exponential; for example, roughly ten times as many earthquakes larger than magnitude 4 occur in a particular time period than earthquakes larger than magnitude 5.[၃၆] In the (low seismicity) United Kingdom, for example, it has been calculated that the average recurrences are:

an earthquake of 3.7–4.6 every year, an earthquake of 4.7–5.5 every 10 years, and an earthquake of 5.6 or larger every 100 years.[၃၇] This is an example of the Gutenberg–Richter law.

The number of seismic stations has increased from about 350 in 1931 to many thousands today. As a result, many more earthquakes are reported than in the past, but this is because of the vast improvement in instrumentation, rather than an increase in the number of earthquakes. The United States Geological Survey (USGS) estimates that, since 1900, there have been an average of 18 major earthquakes (magnitude 7.0–7.9) and one great earthquake (magnitude 8.0 or greater) per year, and that this average has been relatively stable.[၃၈] In recent years, the number of major earthquakes per year has decreased, though this is probably a statistical fluctuation rather than a systematic trend.[၃၉] More detailed statistics on the size and frequency of earthquakes is available from the United States Geological Survey.[၄၀] A recent increase in the number of major earthquakes has been noted, which could be explained by a cyclical pattern of periods of intense tectonic activity, interspersed with longer periods of low intensity. However, accurate recordings of earthquakes only began in the early 1900s, so it is too early to categorically state that this is the case.[၄၁]

Most of the world's earthquakes (90%, and 81% of the largest) take place in the 40,000-kiloမဳတာ-long (25,000 mi), horseshoe-shaped zone called the circum-Pacific seismic belt, known as the Pacific Ring of Fire, which for the most part bounds the Pacific Plate.[၄၂][၄၃] Massive earthquakes tend to occur along other plate boundaries too, such as along the Himalayan Mountains.[၄၄]

With the rapid growth of mega-cities such as Mexico City, Tokyo and Tehran in areas of high seismic risk, some seismologists are warning that a single earthquake may claim the lives of up to three million people.[၄၅]

Induced seismicity[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

While most earthquakes are caused by movement of the Earth's tectonic plates, human activity can also produce earthquakes. Activities both above ground and below may change the stresses and strains on the crust, including building reservoirs, extracting resources such as coal or oil, and injecting fluids underground for waste disposal or fracking.[၄၆] Most of these earthquakes have small magnitudes. The 5.7 magnitude 2011 Oklahoma earthquake is thought to have been caused by disposing wastewater from oil production into injection wells,[၄၇] and studies point to the state's oil industry as the cause of other earthquakes in the past century.[၄၈] A Columbia University paper suggested that the 8.0 magnitude 2008 Sichuan earthquake was induced by loading from the Zipingpu Dam,[၄၉] though the link has not been conclusively proved.[၅၀]

Measuring and locating earthquakes[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

The instrumental scales used to describe the size of an earthquake began with the Richter magnitude scale in the 1930s. It is a relatively simple measurement of an event's amplitude, and its use has become minimal in the 21st century. Seismic waves travel through the Earth's interior and can be recorded by seismometers at great distances. The surface wave magnitude was developed in the 1950s as a means to measure remote earthquakes and to improve the accuracy for larger events. The moment magnitude scale not only measures the amplitude of the shock but also takes into account the seismic moment (total rupture area, average slip of the fault, and rigidity of the rock). The Japan Meteorological Agency seismic intensity scale, the Medvedev–Sponheuer–Karnik scale, and the Mercalli intensity scale are based on the observed effects and are related to the intensity of shaking.

Seismic waves[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Every earthquake produces different types of seismic waves, which travel through rock with different velocities:

Speed of seismic waves[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Propagation velocity of the seismic waves through solid rock ranges from approx. 3 km/s (1.9 mi/s) up to 13 km/s (8.1 mi/s), depending on the density and elasticity of the medium. In the Earth's interior, the shock- or P-waves travel much faster than the S-waves (approx. relation 1.7:1). The differences in travel time from the epicenter to the observatory are a measure of the distance and can be used to image both sources of earthquakes and structures within the Earth. Also, the depth of the hypocenter can be computed roughly.

P-wave speed[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Upper crust soils and unconsolidated sediments: 2–3 km (1.2–1.9 mi) per second

Upper crust solid rock: 3–6 km (1.9–3.7 mi) per second

Lower crust: 6–7 km (3.7–4.3 mi) per second

Deep mantle: 13 km (8.1 mi) per second.

S-waves speed[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Light sediments: 2–3 km (1.2–1.9 mi) per second in

Earths crust:4–5 km (2.5–3.1 mi) per second

Deep mantle: 7 km (4.3 mi) per second

Seismic wave arrival[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

As a consequence, the first waves of a distant earthquake arrive at an observatory via the Earth's mantle.

On average, the kilometer distance to the earthquake is the number of seconds between the P- and S-wave times 8.[၅၁] Slight deviations are caused by inhomogeneities of subsurface structure. By such analysis of seismograms, the Earth's core was located in 1913 by Beno Gutenberg.

S-waves and later arriving surface waves do most of the damage compared to P-waves. P-waves squeeze and expand the material in the same direction they are traveling, whereas S-waves shake the ground up and down and back and forth.[၅၂]

Earthquake location and reporting[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Earthquakes are not only categorized by their magnitude but also by the place where they occur. The world is divided into 754 Flinn–Engdahl regions (F-E regions), which are based on political and geographical boundaries as well as seismic activity. More active zones are divided into smaller F-E regions whereas less active zones belong to larger F-E regions.

Standard reporting of earthquakes includes its magnitude, date and time of occurrence, geographic coordinates of its epicenter, depth of the epicenter, geographical region, distances to population centers, location uncertainty, several parameters that are included in USGS earthquake reports (number of stations reporting, number of observations, etc.), and a unique event ID.[၅၃]

Although relatively slow seismic waves have traditionally been used to detect earthquakes, scientists realized in 2016 that gravitational measurements could provide instantaneous detection of earthquakes, and confirmed this by analyzing gravitational records associated with the 2011 Tohoku-Oki ("Fukushima") earthquake.[၅၄][၅၅]

Effects of earthquakes[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

1755 copper engraving depicting Lisbon in ruins and in flames after the 1755 Lisbon earthquake, which killed an estimated 60,000 people. A tsunami overwhelms the ships in the harbor.

The effects of earthquakes include, but are not limited to, the following:

Shaking and ground rupture[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Damaged buildings in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, January 2010.

Shaking and ground rupture are the main effects created by earthquakes, principally resulting in more or less severe damage to buildings and other rigid structures. The severity of the local effects depends on the complex combination of the earthquake magnitude, the distance from the epicenter, and the local geological and geomorphological conditions, which may amplify or reduce wave propagation.[၅၆] The ground-shaking is measured by ground acceleration.

Specific local geological, geomorphological, and geostructural features can induce high levels of shaking on the ground surface even from low-intensity earthquakes. This effect is called site or local amplification. It is principally due to the transfer of the seismic motion from hard deep soils to soft superficial soils and the effects of seismic energy focalization owing to the typical geometrical setting of such deposits.

Ground rupture is a visible breaking and displacement of the Earth's surface along the trace of the fault, which may be of the order of several meters in the case of major earthquakes. Ground rupture is a major risk for large engineering structures such as dams, bridges, and nuclear power stations and requires careful mapping of existing faults to identify any that are likely to break the ground surface within the life of the structure.[၅၇]

Soil liquefaction[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Soil liquefaction occurs when, because of the shaking, water-saturated granular material (such as sand) temporarily loses its strength and transforms from a solid to a liquid. Soil liquefaction may cause rigid structures, like buildings and bridges, to tilt or sink into the liquefied deposits. For example, in the 1964 Alaska earthquake, soil liquefaction caused many buildings to sink into the ground, eventually collapsing upon themselves.[၅၈]

Human impacts[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Ruins of the Għajn Ħadid Tower, which collapsed during the 1856 Heraklion earthquake

Physical damage from an earthquake will vary depending on the intensity of shaking in a given area and they type of population. Undeserved and developing communities frequently experience more severe impacts (and longer lasting) from a seismic event compared to well developed communities.[၅၉] Impacts may include:

  • Injuries and loss of life
  • Damage to critical infrastructure (short and long term)
    • Roads, bridges and public transportation networks
    • Water, power, swear and gas interruption
    • Communication systems
  • Loss of critical community services including hospitals, police and fire
  • General property damage
  • Collapse or destabilization (potentially leading to future collapse) of buildings

With these impacts and others, the aftermath may bring disease, lack of basic necessities, mental consequences such as panic attacks, depression to survivors,[၆၀] and higher insurance premiums. Recovery times will vary based off the level of damage along with the socioeconomic status of the impacted community.

Landslides[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Script error: The module returned a nil value. It is supposed to return an export table.

Earthquakes can produce slope instability leading to landslides, a major geological hazard. Landslide danger may persist while emergency personnel are attempting rescue work.[၆၁]

Fires[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Fires of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake

Earthquakes can cause fires by damaging electrical power or gas lines. In the event of water mains rupturing and a loss of pressure, it may also become difficult to stop the spread of a fire once it has started. For example, more deaths in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake were caused by fire than by the earthquake itself.[၆၂]

Tsunami[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

The tsunami of the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake

Tsunamis are long-wavelength, long-period sea waves produced by the sudden or abrupt movement of large volumes of water—including when an earthquake occurs at sea. In the open ocean, the distance between wave crests can surpass 100 kiloမဳတာs (62 mi), and the wave periods can vary from five minutes to one hour. Such tsunamis travel 600–800 kilometers per hour (373–497 miles per hour), depending on water depth. Large waves produced by an earthquake or a submarine landslide can overrun nearby coastal areas in a matter of minutes. Tsunamis can also travel thousands of kilometers across open ocean and wreak destruction on far shores hours after the earthquake that generated them.[၆၃]

Ordinarily, subduction earthquakes under magnitude 7.5 do not cause tsunamis, although some instances of this have been recorded. Most destructive tsunamis are caused by earthquakes of magnitude 7.5 or more.[၆၃]

Floods[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Script error: The module returned a nil value. It is supposed to return an export table.

Floods may be secondary effects of earthquakes, if dams are damaged. Earthquakes may cause landslips to dam rivers, which collapse and cause floods.[၆၄]

The terrain below the Sarez Lake in Tajikistan is in danger of catastrophic flooding if the landslide dam formed by the earthquake, known as the Usoi Dam, were to fail during a future earthquake. Impact projections suggest the flood could affect roughly 5 million people.[၆၅]

Major earthquakes[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Earthquakes (M6.0+) since 1900 through 2017
Earthquakes of magnitude 8.0 and greater from 1900 to 2018. The apparent 3D volumes of the bubbles are linearly proportional to their respective fatalities.[၆၆]

One of the most devastating earthquakes in recorded history was the 1556 Shaanxi earthquake, which occurred on 23 January 1556 in Shaanxi, China. More than 830,000 people died.[၆၇] Most houses in the area were yaodongs—dwellings carved out of loess hillsides—and many victims were killed when these structures collapsed. The 1976 Tangshan earthquake, which killed between 240,000 and 655,000 people, was the deadliest of the 20th century.[၆၈]

The 1960 Chilean earthquake is the largest earthquake that has been measured on a seismograph, reaching 9.5 magnitude on 22 May 1960.[၃၃][၃၄] Its epicenter was near Cañete, Chile. The energy released was approximately twice that of the next most powerful earthquake, the Good Friday earthquake (27 March 1964), which was centered in Prince William Sound, Alaska.[၆၉][၇၀] The ten largest recorded earthquakes have all been megathrust earthquakes; however, of these ten, only the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake is simultaneously one of the deadliest earthquakes in history.

Earthquakes that caused the greatest loss of life, while powerful, were deadly because of their proximity to either heavily populated areas or the ocean, where earthquakes often create tsunamis that can devastate communities thousands of kilometers away. Regions most at risk for great loss of life include those where earthquakes are relatively rare but powerful, and poor regions with lax, unenforced, or nonexistent seismic building codes.

Prediction[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

Earthquake prediction is a branch of the science of seismology concerned with the specification of the time, location, and magnitude of future earthquakes within stated limits.[၇၁] Many methods have been developed for predicting the time and place in which earthquakes will occur. Despite considerable research efforts by seismologists, scientifically reproducible predictions cannot yet be made to a specific day or month.[၇၂]

Forecasting[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

While forecasting is usually considered to be a type of prediction, earthquake forecasting is often differentiated from earthquake prediction. Earthquake forecasting is concerned with the probabilistic assessment of general earthquake hazard, including the frequency and magnitude of damaging earthquakes in a given area over years or decades.[၇၃] For well-understood faults the probability that a segment may rupture during the next few decades can be estimated.[၇၄][၇၅]

Earthquake warning systems have been developed that can provide regional notification of an earthquake in progress, but before the ground surface has begun to move, potentially allowing people within the system's range to seek shelter before the earthquake's impact is felt.

Preparedness[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

The objective of earthquake engineering is to foresee the impact of earthquakes on buildings and other structures and to design such structures to minimize the risk of damage. Existing structures can be modified by seismic retrofitting to improve their resistance to earthquakes. Earthquake insurance can provide building owners with financial protection against losses resulting from earthquakes. Emergency management strategies can be employed by a government or organization to mitigate risks and prepare for consequences.

Artificial intelligence may help to assess buildings and plan precautionary operations: the Igor expert system is part of a mobile laboratory that supports the procedures leading to the seismic assessment of masonry buildings and the planning of retrofitting operations on them. It has been successfully applied to assess buildings in Lisbon, Rhodes, Naples.[၇၆]

Individuals can also take preparedness steps like securing water heaters and heavy items that could injure someone, locating shutoffs for utilities, and being educated about what to do when the shaking starts. For areas near large bodies of water, earthquake preparedness encompasses the possibility of a tsunami caused by a large earthquake.

Historical views[ပလေဝ်ဒါန် | ပလေဝ်ဒါန် တမ်ကၞက်]

An image from a 1557 book depicting an earthquake in Italy in the 4th century BCE

From the lifetime of the Greek philosopher Anaxagoras in the 5th century BCE to the 14th century CE, earthquakes were usually attributed to "air (vapors) in the cavities of the Earth."[၇၇] Thales of Miletus (625–547 BCE) was the only documented person who believed that earthquakes were caused by tension between the earth and water.[၇၇] Other theories existed, including the Greek philosopher Anaxamines' (585–526 BCE) beliefs that short incline episodes of dryness and wetness caused seismic activity. The Greek philosopher Democritus (460–371 BCE) blamed water in general for earthquakes.[၇၇] Pliny the Elder called earthquakes "underground thunderstorms".[၇၇]

  1. Spence, William (1989). Measuring the Size of an Earthquake. United States Geological Survey.
  2. "Fault Zone Models, Heat Flow, and the Depth Distribution of Earthquakes in the Continental Crust of the United States" (1982). Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 72 (1): 151–163. 
  3. Sibson, R.H. (2002) "Geology of the crustal earthquake source" International handbook of earthquake and engineering seismology, Volume 1, Part 1, p. 455, eds. W H K Lee, H Kanamori, P C Jennings, and C. Kisslinger, Academic Press, ISBN 978-0-12-440652-0
  4. Hjaltadóttir S., 2010, "Use of relatively located microearthquakes to map fault patterns and estimate the thickness of the brittle crust in Southwest Iceland"
  5. Reports and publications | Seismicity | Icelandic Meteorological office. En.vedur.is.
  6. Lua error in မဝ်ဂျူ:Citation/CS1 at line 828: Argument map not defined for this variable: ArticleNumber.
  7. Instrumental California Earthquake Catalog. WGCEP. Archived from the original on 2011-07-25။ Retrieved on 2022-11-25
  8. "Variations in earthquake-size distribution across different stress regimes" (2005). Nature 437 (7058): 539–542. doi:10.1038/nature04094. PMID 16177788. Bibcode2005Natur.437..539S. 
  9. Geoscience Australia
  10. "Estimating expectable maximum magnitude of earthquakes from fault dimensions" (1979). Geology 7 (7): 336–340. doi:10.1130/0091-7613(1979)7<336:EMEMOE>2.0.CO;2. Bibcode1979Geo.....7..336W. 
  11. Global Centroid Moment Tensor Catalog. Globalcmt.org.
  12. M7.5 Northern Peru Earthquake of 26 September 2005. National Earthquake Information Center (17 October 2005).
  13. "A new self-organizing mechanism for deep-focus earthquakes" (October 26, 1989). Nature 341 (6244): 733–737. doi:10.1038/341733a0. Bibcode1989Natur.341..733G. 
  14. Foxworthy and Hill (1982). Volcanic Eruptions of 1980 at Mount St. Helens, The First 100 Days: USGS Professional Paper 1249 
  15. Watson, John (January 7, 1998). Volcanoes and Earthquakes. United States Geological Survey.
  16. ၁၆.၀ ၁၆.၁ National Research Council (U.S.). Committee on the Science of Earthquakes (2003). "5. Earthquake Physics and Fault-System Science", Living on an Active Earth: Perspectives on Earthquake Science. Washington, D.C.: National Academies Press, 418. ISBN 978-0-309-06562-7 
  17. "Interactions between Temperature and Pore-Fluid Pressure during Earthquake Faulting and a Mechanism for Partial or Total Stress Relief" (1973). Nat. Phys. Sci. 243 (126): 66–68. doi:10.1038/physci243066a0. Bibcode1973NPhS..243...66S. 
  18. "Effective normal stress alteration due to pore pressure changes induced by dynamic slip propagation on a plane between dissimilar materials" (2006). J. Geophys. Res. 111, B10308 (B10). doi:10.1029/2006JB004396. Bibcode2006JGRB..11110308R. 
  19. ၁၉.၀ ၁၉.၁ ၁၉.၂ "Theory of Effective Stress in Soil and Rock and Implications for Fracturing Processes: A Review" (2021). Geosciences 11 (3): 119. doi:10.3390/geosciences11030119. Bibcode2021Geosc..11..119G. 
  20. ၂၀.၀ ၂၀.၁ "Aftershocks Caused by Pore Fluid Flow?" (1972). Science 175 (4024): 885–887. doi:10.1126/science.175.4024.885. PMID 17781062. Bibcode1972Sci...175..885N. 
  21. ၂၁.၀ ၂၁.၁ ၂၁.၂ What are Aftershocks, Foreshocks, and Earthquake Clusters?.
  22. Repeating Earthquakes. United States Geological Survey (January 29, 2009).
  23. The Parkfield, California, Earthquake Experiment.
  24. ၂၄.၀ ၂၄.၁ Aftershock | geology (in en).
  25. Earthquake Swarms at Yellowstone. United States Geological Survey. Archived from the original on 2008-05-13။ Retrieved on 2022-11-25
  26. Duke၊ Alan။ "Quake 'swarm' shakes Southern California"၊ CNN။ 
  27. Amos Nur (2000). "Poseidon's Horses: Plate Tectonics and Earthquake Storms in the Late Bronze Age Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean". Journal of Archaeological Science 27 (1): 43–63. doi:10.1006/jasc.1999.0431. ISSN 0305-4403.  Archived ၂၀၀၉-၀၃-၂၅ at the Wayback Machine
  28. Earthquake Storms. Horizon (1 April 2003).
  29. "11.3 Measuring Earthquakes" (in en) (2015-09-01). 
  30. Chung & Bernreuter 1980, p. 1.
  31. The USGS policy for reporting magnitudes to the press was posted at USGS policy Archived ၂၀၁၆-၀၅-၀၄ at the Wayback Machine, but has been removed. A copy can be found at http://dapgeol.tripod.com/usgsearthquakemagnitudepolicy.htm.
  32. "Italy's earthquake history." BBC News. October 31, 2002.
  33. ၃၃.၀ ၃၃.၁ Cool Earthquake Facts. United States Geological Survey.
  34. ၃၄.၀ ၃၄.၁ Pressler၊ Margaret Webb။ "More earthquakes than usual? Not really."၊ KidsPost၊ Washington Post: Washington Post၊ 14 April 2010၊ pp. C10။ 
  35. Earthquake Hazards Program. United States Geological Survey.
  36. USGS Earthquake statistics table based on data since 1900 Archived ၂၀၁၀-၀၅-၂၄ at the Wayback Machine
  37. Seismicity and earthquake hazard in the UK. Quakes.bgs.ac.uk.
  38. Common Myths about Earthquakes. United States Geological Survey.
  39. Are Earthquakes Really on the Increase? Archived ၂၀၁၄-၀၆-၃၀ at the Wayback Machine, USGS Science of Changing World. Retrieved 30 May 2014.
  40. Earthquake Facts and Statistics: Are earthquakes increasing?. United States Geological Survey. Archived from the original on 2006-08-12။ Retrieved on 2022-11-25
  41. The 10 biggest earthquakes in history Archived ၂၀၁၃-၀၉-၃၀ at the Wayback Machine, Australian Geographic, March 14, 2011.
  42. Historic Earthquakes and Earthquake Statistics: Where do earthquakes occur?. United States Geological Survey.
  43. Visual Glossary – Ring of Fire. United States Geological Survey.
  44. "Fatal attraction: living with earthquakes, the growth of villages into megacities, and earthquake vulnerability in the modern world" (2006). Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society 364 (1845): 1911–1925. doi:10.1098/rsta.2006.1805. PMID 16844641. Bibcode2006RSPTA.364.1911J. 
  45. "Global urban seismic risk." Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Science.
  46. "Global review of human-induced earthquakes" (2018). Earth-Science Reviews 178: 438–514. doi:10.1016/j.earscirev.2017.07.008. Bibcode2018ESRv..178..438F. 
  47. "Study Links 2011 Quake to Technique at Oil Wells"၊ March 28, 2013။ 
  48. "A Century of Induced Earthquakes in Oklahoma?" (2015). Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 105 (6): 2863–2870. doi:10.1785/0120150109. Bibcode2015BuSSA.105.2863H. 
  49. "Evidence for anthropogenic surface loading as trigger mechanism of the 2008 Wenchuan earthquake" (July 2012). Environmental Earth Sciences 66 (5): 1439–1447. doi:10.1007/s12665-011-1355-7. 
  50. "Possible Link Between Dam and China Quake"၊ February 5, 2009။ 
  51. Speed of Sound through the Earth. Hypertextbook.com.
  52. Newsela | The science of earthquakes (in en).
  53. Geographic.org. Magnitude 8.0 – SANTA CRUZ ISLANDS Earthquake Details. Global Earthquake Epicenters with Maps.
  54. Earth's gravity offers earlier earthquake warnings.
  55. Gravity shifts could sound early earthquake alarm. Archived from the original on 2016-11-24။ Retrieved on 2022-11-25
  56. On Shaky Ground, Association of Bay Area Governments, San Francisco, reports 1995,1998 (updated 2003). Abag.ca.gov. Archived from the original on 2009-09-21။ Retrieved on 2022-11-25
  57. Guidelines for evaluating the hazard of surface fault rupture, California Geological Survey. California Department of Conservation (2002). Archived from the original on 2009-10-09။ Retrieved on 2022-11-25
  58. Historic Earthquakes – 1964 Anchorage Earthquake. United States Geological Survey.
  59. The wicked problem of earthquake hazard in developing countries (in en).
  60. Earthquake Resources. Nctsn.org (30 January 2018).
  61. Natural Hazards – Landslides. United States Geological Survey.
  62. The Great 1906 San Francisco earthquake of 1906. United States Geological Survey.
  63. ၆၃.၀ ၆၃.၁ (1988) Washington Division of Geology and Earth Resources Information Circular 85. Washington State Earthquake Hazards။ 
  64. Notes on Historical Earthquakes. British Geological Survey. Archived from the original on 2007-11-19။ Retrieved on 2022-11-25
  65. "Fresh alert over Tajik flood threat"၊ BBC News၊ 2003-08-03။ 
  66. USGS: Magnitude 8 and Greater Earthquakes Since 1900 Archived ၂၀၁၆-၀၄-၁၄ at the Wayback Machine
  67. "Earthquakes with 50,000 or More Deaths Archived နဝ်ဝေမ်ဗါ ၁, ၂၀၀၉ at the Wayback Machine". U.S. Geological Survey
  68. Spignesi, Stephen J. (2005). Catastrophe!: The 100 Greatest Disasters of All Time. ISBN 0-8065-2558-4
  69. Kanamori Hiroo. The Energy Release in Great Earthquakes. Journal of Geophysical Research. Archived from the original on 2010-07-23။ Retrieved on 2022-11-25
  70. USGS. How Much Bigger?. United States Geological Survey.
  71. Geller et al. 1997, p. 1616, following Allen (1976, p. 2070), who in turn followed Wood & Gutenberg (1935)
  72. Earthquake Prediction Archived ၂၀၀၉-၁၀-၀၇ at the Wayback Machine. Ruth Ludwin, U.S. Geological Survey.
  73. Kanamori 2003, p. 1205. See also International Commission on Earthquake Forecasting for Civil Protection 2011, p. 327.
  74. Working Group on California Earthquake Probabilities in the San Francisco Bay Region, 2003 to 2032, 2003, Bay Area Earthquake Probabilities.
  75. Pailoplee, Santi (2017-03-13). "Probabilities of Earthquake Occurrences along the Sumatra-Andaman Subduction Zone" (in en). Open Geosciences 9 (1): 4. doi:10.1515/geo-2017-0004. ISSN 2391-5447. Bibcode2017OGeo....9....4P. 
  76. "Applying AI to Structural Safety Monitoring and Evaluation" (1996). IEEE Expert 11 (4): 24–34. doi:10.1109/64.511774. 
  77. ၇၇.၀ ၇၇.၁ ၇၇.၂ ၇၇.၃ "Earthquakes". Encyclopedia of World Environmental History. Vol. 1: A–G. Routledge. 2003. pp. 358–364.
ကလေၚ်သီကေတ်လဝ် နူ "https://mnw.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=ကသဳတိ&oldid=43160"