You are on page 1of 4

National Earthquake Information Center Glossary Terms

Definitio
Term n
Aftershock An earthquake which follows a larger earthquake or main shock and originates in or near the
rupture zone of the larger earthquake. Generally, major earthquakes are followed by a larger
number of aftershocks, decreasing in frequency with time.
Amplitude The maximum height of a wave crest or depth of a trough.
Array An ordered arrangement of seismometers or geophones, the data from which feeds into a
central receiver.
Arrival The appearance of seismic energy on a seismic record.
Arrival time The time at which a particular wave phase arrives at a detector.
Aseismic Not associated with an earthquake, as in aseismic slip. Also used to indicate an area with no
record of earthquakes; an aseismic zone.
Body wave A seismic wave that can travel through the interior of the earth. P-waves and S-waves are
body waves.
Central angle An angle with the vertex at the center of the Earth, with one ray passing through the
hypocenter (and also the epicenter) and the other ray passing through the recording station.
Consolidated Tightly packed. Composed of particles that are not easily separated.
Core The innermost layers of the Earth. The inner core is solid and has a radius of 1,300 km (800
mi). (Compare this radius to the radius of the Earth, at 6,371 km/3,960 mi.) The outer core is
fluid and is 2,300 km (1,400 mi) thick. S-waves cannot travel through the outer core.
Continental drift The theory, first advanced by Alfred Wegener, that Earth's continents were originally one land
mass. Pieces of the land mass split off and migrated to form the continents.
Crust The thin outer layer of the Earth's surface, averaging 10 km (6 mi) thick under the oceans and
up to 50 km (30 mi) thick on the continents. This is the only layer of the Earth that humans
have actually seen.
Earthquake Shaking of the Earth caused by a sudden movement of rock beneath its surface.
Earthquake swarm A series of minor earthquakes, none of which may be identified as the main shock, occurring in
a limited area and time.
Elastic wave A wave that is propagated by some kind of elastic deformation, that is, a change in shape that
disappears when the forces are removed. A seismic wave is a type of elastic wave.
Epicenter That point on the Earth's surface directly above the hypocenter of an earthquake.
Fault A weak point in the Earth's crust and upper mantle where the rock layers have ruptured and
slipped. Faults are caused by earthquakes, and earthquakes are likely to reoccur on pre-
existing faults.
First arrival The first recorded signal attributed to seismic wave travel from a source.
Focus That point within the Earth from which originates the first motion of an earthquake and its
elastic waves.
Focal zone See Rupture Zone.
Foreshock A small tremor that commonly precedes a larger earthquake or main shock by seconds to
weeks and that originates in or near the rupture zone of the larger earthquake.
Great earthquake An earthquake having a magnitude of 8 or greater on the Richter scale.
Hazard A risk. An object or situation that has the possibility of injury or damage.
Hypocenter The calculated location of the focus of an earthquake.
Intensity A measure of the effects of an earthquake at a particular place on humans, structures, and the
land itself. The intensity at a point depends not only upon the strength of the earthquake
(magnitude) but also upon the distance from the earthquake to the point and the local geology
at that point.
Isoseismal line A line connecting points on the Earth's surface at which earthquake intensity is the same. It is
usually a closed curve around the epicenter.
Landslide An abrupt movement of soil and bedrock downhill in response to gravity. Landslides can be
triggered by an earthquake or other natural causes. Undersea landslides can cause tsunamis.
Latitude The location of a point north or south of the equator. Latitude is shown on a map or globe as
east-west lines parallel to the equator.
Leaking mode A surface seismic wave which is imperfectly trapped so that its energy leaks or escapes across
a layer boundary causing some attenuation, or loss of energy.
Liquefaction The process in which a solid soil takes on the characteristics of a liquid as a result of an
increase in pore pressure and a reduction in stress. In other words, solid ground turns to jelly.
Lg wave A surface wave which travels through the continental crust.
Longitude The location of a point east or west of the prime meridian. Longitude is shown on a map or
globe as north-south lines left and right of the prime meridian, which passes through
Greenwich, England.
Love wave A major type of surface wave having a horizontal motion that is shear or transverse to the
direction of propagation (travel). It is named after A.E.H. Love, the English mathematician who
discovered it.
Low-velocity zone Any layer in the Earth in which seismic wave velocities are lower than in the layers above and
below.
Magnitude A measure of the strength of an earthquake or strain energy released by it, as determined by
seismographic observations. This is a logarithmic value originally defined by Charles Richter in
1935. An increase of one unit of magnitude (for example, from 4.6 to 5.6) represents a 10-fold
increase in wave amplitude on a seismogram or approximately a 30-fold increase in the
energy released. In other words, a magnitude 6.7 earthquake releases over 900 times (30
times 30) the energy of a 4.7 earthquake. There is no beginning nor end to this scale.
However, rock mechanics seems to preclude earthquakes smaller than about -1 or larger than
about 9.5. Except in special circumstances, earthquakes below magnitude 2.5 are not
generally felt by humans.
Major earthquake An earthquake having a magnitude of 7 to 7.99 on the Richter scale.
Mantle The layer of rock that lies between the crust and the outer core of the Earth. It is
approximately 2,900 km (1,800 mi) thick and is the largest of the Earth's major layers.
Microearthquake An earthquake having a magnitude of 2 or less on the Richter scale.
Microseism A more or less continuous motion in the Earth that is unrelated to an earthquake and that has
a period of 1.0 to 9.0 seconds. It is caused by a variety of natural and artificial agents.
Modified Mercalli Mercalli intensity scale modified for North American conditions. A scale, composed of 12
scale increasing levels of intensity that range from imperceptible shaking to catastrophic
destruction, that is designated by Roman numerals. It does not have a mathematical basis;
instead it is an arbitrary ranking based on observed effects.
Mohorovicic The boundary surface or sharp seismic-velocity discontinuity (pronounced Mo-ho-ro-vi-chich)
discontinuity (the that separates the Earth's crust from the underlying mantle. Named for Andrija Mohorovicic,
Moho) the Croatian seismologist who first suggested its existence.
90% marginal Each parameter estimated (time, latitude, longitude and depth) includes an error value (e.g., a
confidence interval b). The marginal confidence interval is from a-b to a and has been derived so that the true
value will fall into this interval 90 percent of the time regardless of the values of other
parameters estimated at the same time.
P wave Primary, longitudinal, irrotational, push, pressure, dilatational, compressional, or push-pull
wave. P waves are the fastest body waves and arrive at stations before the S waves, or
secondary waves. The waves carry energy through the Earth as longitudinal waves, moving
particles in the same line as the direction of the wave. P waves can travel through all layers of
the Earth. P waves are generally felt by humans as a bang or thump.
Paleomagnetism The natural magnetic traces that reveal the intensity and direction of Earth's magnetic field in
the geologic past. Also, the study of these magnetic traces.
Paleoseismology The study of ancient (prehistoric) earthquakes.
Period The time between two successive wave crests.
Phase The onset of a displacement or oscillation on a seismogram indicating the arrival of a different
type of seismic wave.
Plate One of the huge sections which make up the Earth's crust. The plates are continuously
moving.
Plate boundary The place where two or more plates in the Earth's crust meet.
Plate tectonics The theory that the Earth's crust and upper mantle (the lithosphere) is broken into a number
of more or less rigid, but constantly moving, segments or plates.
Rayleigh wave A type of surface wave having a retrograde, elliptical motion at the Earth's surface, similar to
the waves caused when a stone is dropped into a pond. These are the slowest, but often the
largest and most destructive, of the wave types caused by an earthquake. They are usually
felt as a rolling or rocking motion and in the case of major earthquakes, can be seen as they
approach. Named after Lord Rayleigh, the English physicist who predicted its existence.
Recurrence interval The approximate length of time between earthquakes in a specific seismically active area.
Reflect To bounce back from a surface.
Refract To bend or change direction.
Richter scale The system used to measure the strength of an earthquake. Developed by Charles Richter in
1935 as a means of categorizing local earthquakes. It is a collection of mathematical formulas;
it is not a physical device.
Rupture zone The area of the Earth through which faulting occurred during an earthquake. For very small
earthquakes, this zone could be the size of a pinhead, but in the case of a great earthquake,
the rupture zone may extend several hundred kilometers in length and tens of kilometers in
width.
S wave Shear, secondary, rotational, tangential, equivoluminal, distortional, transverse, or shake
wave. These waves carry energy through the Earth in very complex patterns of transverse
(crosswise) waves. These waves move more slowly than P waves, but in an earthquake they
are usually bigger. S waves cannot travel through the outer core because these waves cannot
exist in fluids, such as air, water or molten rock.
Seiche A free or standing wave oscillation of the surface of water in an enclosed basin that is initiated
by local atmospheric changes, tidal currents, or earthquakes. Similar to water sloshing in a
bathtub.
Seismic belt An elongated earthquake zone, for example, circum-Pacific, Mediterranean, Rocky Mountain.
About 60 percent of the world's earthquakes occur in the circum-Pacific seismic belt.
Seismic constant In building codes dealing with earthquake hazards, an arbitrarily-set acceleration value (in
units of gravity) that a building must withstand.
Seismicity Earthquake activity.
Seismic Of or having to do with earthquakes.
Seismic sea wave A tsunami generated by an undersea earthquake.
Seismic zone A region in which earthquakes are known to occur.
Seismogram A written record of an earthquake, recorded by a seismograph.
Seismograph An instrument that records the motions of the Earth, especially earthquakes.
Seismograph station A site at which one or more seismographs are set up and routinely monitored.
Seismologist A scientist who studies earthquakes.
Seismometry The instrumental aspects of seismology.
Signal-to-noise ratio The comparison between the amplitude of the seismic signal and the amplitude of noise
caused by seismic unrest and (or) the seismic instruments.
Spectral PGA (peak acceleration) is what is experienced by a particle on the ground. SA is
acceleration approximately what is experienced by a building, as modeled by a particle on a massless
vertical rod having the same natural period of vibration as the building..
Spread The layout of seismometer or geophone groups from which data from a single shot (the
explosive charge) are recorded simultaneously.
Spreading center An elongated region where two plates are being pulled away from each other. New crust is
formed as molten rock is forced upward into the gap. Examples of spreading centers include
the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the East African Rift.
Subduction The process in which one lithospheric plate collides with and is forced down under another
plate and drawn back into the Earth's mantle.
Subduction zone An elongated region along which a plate descends relative to another plate, for example, the
descent of the Nazca plate beneath the South American plate along the Peru-Chile Trench.
Surface of the Earth The value given is the depth below the surface of the mean spheroid. The mean spheroid is a
uniform approximation to the true shape of the Earth. No adjustment is made to the depth due
to any differences between the true Earth and the mean spheroid. For example, the minimum
depth that will be given is 0 km, even though a quake directly under Mount Everest (elevation
8,850 m) could legitimately have a depth of -6 km and still be 2 km underground. On the other
hand, a depth of 10 km would actually be more than 1 km above the ocean floor of Challenger
Deep (11,033 m below sea level) in the Marianas Trench of the Pacific Ocean.
Surface waves Waves that move over the surface of the Earth. Rayleigh waves and Love waves are surface
waves.
Teleseism An earthquake that is distant (usually more than 20 degrees) from the recording station.
Tidal wave The correct word for the big waves people often call 'tidal waves' is tsunami. True 'tidal waves'
- or waves caused by the tides - are the ordinary waves people see on the ocean.
Travel time The time required for a wave train to travel from its source to a point of observation.
Tsunami One or a series of huge sea waves caused by earthquakes or other large-scale disturbance of
the ocean floor. (Referred to incorrectly by many as a tidal wave, but these waves have
nothing to do with tides.) The word tsunami is Japanese, meaning 'harbor wave.'
Unconsolidated Loosely arranged, not cemented together, so particles separate easily.
UTC Coordinated Universal Time. The time scale based on the atomic second but corrected every
now and again to keep it in approximate sync with the earth's rotation. The corrections show
up as the leap seconds put into UTC - usually on New Year's Eve. In the most common usage,
the terms GMT and UTC are identical.
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

You might also like