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25 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

Deformation

The bending, tilting, and breaking of earths crust.

Isotasy

Condition of gravitational and buoyant equilibrium between Earth's lithosphere and asthenosphere

Stress

The amount of force per unit area that acts on a rock

Strain

Any change in a rock's shape or volume caused by stress

Fold

A form of ductile strain in which rock layers bend, usually as a result of compression

Fault

A break in a body of rock along which one block slides relative to another; a form of brittle strain

Mountain Range

A series of mountains that are closely related in orientation, age, and mode of formation

Folded Mountain

A mountain that forms when rock layers are squeezed together and uplifted

Fault-Block Mountain

A mountain that forms where faulting Earth's crust into large blocks, which causes some blocks to drop down relative to other blocks

Dome Mountain

A circular or elliptical, almost symmetrical elevation or structure in which the stratified rock slopes downward gently from the central point of folding

Focus

The location within earth along a fault at which the first motion of an earthquake occurs

Elastic rebound

The sudden return of elastically deformed rock to its undeformed shape

Epicenter

The point on Earth's surface directly above an earthquakes starting point or focus

Body wave

A seismic wave that travels through the body of a medium

Surface wave

A seismic wave that travels along the surface of a medium and that has a stronger effect near the surface of the medium than it has in the interior

P wave

A primary wave, or compression wave; a seismic wave that causes particles of rock to move in a back-and-forth direction parallel to the direction in which the wave is traveling

S wave

A secondary wave, or shear wave; a seismic wave that causes particles of rock to move in a side-to-side direction perpendicular to the direction in which the wave is traveling

Shadow zone

An area on earths surface where no direct seismic waves form a particular earthquake can be detected

Fault zone

A region of numerous, closely spaced faults

Seismograph

An instrument that records vibrations in the ground

Seismogram

A tracing of earthquake motion that is recorded by a seismograph

Magnitude

A measure of strength of an earthquake

Intensity

In earth science, the amount of damage caused by and earthquake

Tsunami

A giant ocean wave that forms after a volcanic eruption, submarine earthquake, or landslide

Seismic gap

An area along a fault where relatively few earthquakes have occurred recently but where strong earthquakes are known to have occurred in the past