Term
what are four qualities of the CC earthquake that affected how destructive it was to the city of CC? |
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Definition
4 qualities of CC earthquake that affected how destructive it was to the city
1. it was shallow, and close to CBD
2. high radiated energy for a 6.3 mangitude earthquake
3. directivity of rupture was towards CBD
4. local ground affects like basins may have enchanced strong ground motion |
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Term
what three seismological characteristics influence distribution and severity of damage the most? |
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Definition
the three seismological chacterisitcs that infleunce severity and distribution of damage the most
1. PGA
2. duration of shaking
3. frequency content |
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Term
which leads to more PGA, vertical or horizontal displacement? |
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Definition
vertical displacement leads to more PGA than horizontal displacement |
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Term
how is the direction of displacement connected to PGA? |
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Definition
veritcal displacement leads to a higher PGA than horizontal displacement |
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Term
to figure out expected PGA, look at these four things
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Definition
to figure out what the predicted PGA for a certain quake is, look at
1. predicted Mw
2. distance from quake
3. geology. How rocks will carry waves, dry vs wet, solid rock vs granular, etc
4. direction of displacement. vertical displacement leads to a higher PGA than horizontal displacement |
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Term
what is seismic amplifacation? |
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Definition
seismic amplification is when waves from earthquakes are concentrated on a certain area |
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Term
foucusing of seismic energy is called what? |
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Definition
focusing of seismic energy is called siesmic amplification |
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Term
where is seismic amplifacation likely? |
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Definition
seismic amplifacation is likely over weak sediments, over basins, or near basins |
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Term
duration of shaking at a certain site depends on what three things? |
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Definition
duration of shaking at a site depends on three things
1. Mw
2. rupture process
3. geology. basin affects, where siesmic waves rattle around in a confined area, will increase duration of shaking |
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Term
draw topographic amplifacation |
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Definition
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Term
draw topographic amplifacation |
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Definition
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Term
what phenomenom causes boulders to jump? |
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Definition
the phenomenom that causes boulders on hilltops to jump from one spot to another is topographic amplification |
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Term
to predict frequency, what 4 things do you need to know? |
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Definition
to predict frequency you must know
1. Mw of expected quake
2. distance from fault
3. expected fault rupture processes
4. geology, how rocks will transmit waves |
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Term
draw liquefaction happening to a bunch of particles in a box |
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Definition
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Term
two materials what will undergo liquefaction |
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Definition
two materials that will undergo liquefaction are
1. coarse silt
2. find sand |
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Term
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Definition
the takeway from that picture of a paleodike is that multiple sand blows have taken the same path during paleoliquefaction. dating the sediments gives insight to recurrence interval |
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Term
what two factors determine if liquefaction will occur |
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Definition
PGA is the big determinant of whether liquefaction will occur. duration of shaking matters too |
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Term
how can liquefaction affect river flood risk? |
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Definition
liquefaction had a twofold impact on river flood risk in CC
1. it narrowed the river channel, reducing the amount of water needed to overflow banks
2. it caused floodplains to subside |
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Term
without isotope dating or cross cutting relationships, what are 2 ways to figure out the relative ages of sediments in a paleodike? |
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Definition
without isotope dating, there are two good ways to figure out the relative ages of sediments in a paleodike
1. look for levels of redness from oxidation. the older the sediment, the more water tables have passed through, the higher the level of oxidation
2. look for bioturbation. more bioturbation means older
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Term
human impact on subsidence and liquefaction |
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Definition
humans disrupted the subsidence/deposition pattern. the way it naturally works is that subsidence would occurs, and then rivers would deposit more sediment and build the land back up. Humans changing river channel patterns means the ground is just gonna sink and sink, and relative SL will rise |
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Term
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Definition
the reason liquefaction was so widespread from a small earthquake is has to do with the susceptibility of sediment, and seismic amplifacation |
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