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Earthquake
Size
The
Size of Earthquakes
Earthquakes vary enormously
in the amount of energy released, over a range exceeding a million million.
It is not possible to measure the energy release directly, so it must be computed
from measurements of the amplitude of the ground vibrations.
Earthquake
Magnitude
The most common
method of describing the size of an earthquake is the Richter magnitude scale,
ML. This takes the logarithm of the ground displacement as measured by a seismograph,
and applies a correction which varies with the distance from the earthquake
to the seismograph.
This means that for each unit of magnitude there is a tenfold
increase in ground displacement. Because larger earthquakes last longer than
small earthquakes, there is about a thirty-fold increase in seismic energy
release for each unit increase in magnitude. An ML 1.0 earthquake releases a similar amount of seismic
energy as a typical quarry blast. An ML 5.0 earthquake releases about the
same seismic energy as a 10,000 tonne equivalent nuclear blast, such as that
used at Hiroshima.The Richter magnitude scale can only be used when seismographs
are within 600 km of the earthquake. For greater distances, other magnitude
scales have been defined. While not exactly the same as the original Richter
magnitude, they give values that can range from less than 0.0 to over 9.0.
For example, the surface wave magnitude, MS, is often used for large distant
earthquakes. Most of these scales saturate at some magnitude and do not properly
represent earthquake size for larger events. For example, the ML scale saturates
over ML 6.0, while the MS scale can be used to about MS 8.0.
The most modern scale is the moment magnitude scale MW, which
can be used for a wide range of magnitudes and distances. This has been defined
so that the numerical value is close to ML for earthquakes up to magnitude
6.0, and close to MS for magnitudes 6.0 to 8.0. The very largest earthquakes,
such as experienced in Chile in 1960 or Alaska in 1964, can reach magnitudes
larger than MW 9.0.
Fault Dimensions
The area of
a fault that ruptures in a particular earthquake correlates with the magnitude
of the earthquake. Typical fault rupture dimensions are as follows:
Magnitude
Mw |
Fault
area
(km2) |
Typical
rupture dimensions
(km x km) |
|
4
|
1
|
1 x
1
|
|
5
|
10
|
3 x
3
|
|
6
|
100
|
10 x
10
|
|
7
|
1000
|
30 x
30
|
|
8
|
10,000
|
50 x
200
|
The rupture
displacement in an earthquake is typically about 1/20,000 of the rupture length.
For example, a 1 km long rupture from an Mw 4.0 event has a displacement of
about 1km/20,000, or 0.05 metres. A magnitude Mw 8.0 earthquake with a rupture
length of 100 km may give a displacement of a few metres.
The rupture
velocity is about 3 km/s, so the rupture duration in seconds is given by fault
length in kilometres divided by 3. For example, a 1 km long rupture from an
Mw 4.0 event will occur in 1km/3, or one third of a second. A magnitude Mw
8.0 earthquake with a rupture length of 100 km may take 100/3 or over thirty
seconds to rupture.
THESE FIGURES
ARE ALL APPROXIMATE AND WILL VARY FROM EARTHQUAKE TO EARTHQUAKE, DEPENDING
ON THE FOCAL MECHANISM AND STRESS DROP.
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