Title: Environmental%20Geology
1Environmental Geology
2Directivity
- The amplitude of seismic waves is greater in the
direction of fault rupture
3Building Damage and Ground-Structure Interactions
- Damage depends on the ground motion and duration
of shaking - Ground motion is related to
- -the magnitude of the eq and characteristics
of the seismic waves - -Proximity of the epicenter to the site
- Soil conditions at the site
-
4Resonance
- Amplifying effect produced when the natural
vibration frequency of ground or structure is
matched by the frequency of seismic waves. - Building Height / Typical Natural Period
- 2 story .2 seconds
- 5 story .5 seconds
- 10 story 1.0 seconds
- 20 story 2.0 seconds
- 30 story 3.0 seconds
buildings suffer the greatest damage from ground
motion at a frequency close or equal to their own
natural frequency.
5Resonance
- Building vibration periods roughly the number
of stories - If building and soil have same frequency of
vibration, resonation occurs (amplification) - Typically, low-rise buildings (lt5 Stories)
located on shallow soils (lt50 feet) and high-rise
buildings (gt14 Stories) on deep soils (gt150 feet)
sustain the most structural damage
6Earthquake Damage
- A) Direct shaking ground rupture
- B) Secondary effects
- Liquefaction
- Landslides
- Fires
- Tsunamis
- Flooding due to changes in land elevation
7What can we do?
- Structural protection
- Land use planning
- Earthquake warning system
- Effective emergency response plan
- Increased insurance/recovery measures
8B) Short-term prediction
- Precursory phenomena
- Ground deformation
- Seismic gaps
- Patterns and frequency of small earthquakes
- foreshocks
- Anomalous animal behavior
9Frequency Period of Earthquake waves
(clarification)
- Frequency (Hz) 1/Period (sec)
- Higher frequency/lower period more rapid
attenuation (examples?) - Body waves (usually .5-20 Hz .05-2 sec)
- higher frequencies (lower periods) than surface
waves - Surface waves (usually less than 1 Hz, greater
than 1 sec) - Lower frequencies (higher periods)
10Effect of waves
- Buildings have a natural vibrational frequency
- Low buildings have higher frequencies (lower
periods) than high buildings - Low buildings shaken by body waves (high freq.)
- High buildings shaken by surface waves (low
freq.) - High frequency waves attenuate more quickly
- High buildings shaken at longer distance from the
epicenter - REALITY MANY FACTORS GOVERN EARTHQUAKE DAMAGE!!!
11Earthquake Damage
- A) Direct shaking ground rupture
- B) Secondary effects
- Liquefaction
- Landslides
- Fires
- Tsunamis
- Flooding due to changes in land elevation
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17Human activity that affects e.q.
- 1) Underground nuclear explosions
- 2) Loading/unloading of the earths crust
- Dam or reservoir
- 3) Deep waste disposal
- Ex Rocky Mnt. Arsenal (1962-1965)
- Liquid waste pumped 3.6 km
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19What can we do?
- Structural protection
- Land use planning
- Earthquake warning system
- Effective emergency response plan
- Increased insurance/recovery measures
20Earthquake prediction
- A) Long-term prediction
- Estimate relative seismic hazard
- Estimate conditional probabilities
- B) Short-term prediction
- Precursory phenomena
21A) Long-term prediction
- Estimate relative seismic hazard
- Active faults?
- Active Holocene
- potentially active Quaternary
- Inactive Pre Quaternary
- History of fault activity
- Paleoseismology (Pallet Creek study Coyote
Creek study page) - Estimate average recurrence interval
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25B) Short-term prediction
- Precursory phenomena
- Ground deformation
- Seismic gaps
- Patterns and frequency of small earthquakes
- foreshocks
- Anomalous animal behavior
26The San Andreas Fault Zone in Southern California
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37California Regulations pertaining to earthquakes
- Alquist-Priolo Fault Zoning Act (1972)
(California law) - direct result of the 1971 San Fernando Earthquake
- requires that zones along active faults with
well-defined surface features be established - (http//www.consrv.ca.gov/CGS/rghm/ap/)
- Seismic Hazards Mapping Act (1990)
- addresses non-surface fault rupture earthquake
hazards, including liquefaction and seismically
induced landslides - The Natural Hazards Disclosure Act (1998)
- sellers of real property must provide prospective
buyers with a "Natural Hazard Disclosure
Statement" when the property being sold lies
within one or more state-mapped hazard areas.
38Alquist-Priolo Fault Zoning Act
- 1972 Alquist-Priolo Special Studies Zones Act -
Passed in 1972 as a direct result of the 1971 San
Fernando Earthquake. - Many cities have their own amendments
- Purpose
- Provides policies and criteria to assist cities,
counties, and state agencies in the exercise of
their responsibility to prohibit the locations of
developments and structures for human occupancy
across the trace of active faults - Fault must have well-defined Holocene surface
rupture (Blind-thrusts are exempt)
39Alquist-Priolo Fault Zoning Act
- Summary of Specific Criteria
- No structure for human occupancy shall be placed
within 50 feet of an active fault - Area within 50 feet of fault trace presumed to be
underlain by active branches of the fault unless
proven otherwise - Lead agencies (State Geologist, State Mining and
Geology Board) shall provide public disclosure of
delineated fault zones to the public - Development permit applications for any project
within a delineated zone must be accompanied by a
geologic report - The sellers agent or seller of real property
located within a delineated zone shall disclose
to the buyer that fact
40Alquist Priolo Fault Zoning Act
- Exemptions
- Any structure built before May 4, 1975
- Single-Family wood-framed dwellings (2 stories or
under) - Conversions or alterations of existing structures
(under 50 the value of the structure).
41Seismic Hazards Mapping Act
- Passed in 1990, addresses non-surface fault
rupture earthquake hazards, including
liquefaction and seismically induced landslides.
42Seismic Zones
- In Seismic Zone 4, you have a one in ten chance
that an earthquake with an active peak
acceleration level of 0.4g (4/10 the acceleration
of gravity) will occur within the next fifty
years. - In Zone 1, you have a one in ten chance that an
earthquake with an active peak acceleration level
of 0.1g (1/10 the acceleration of gravity) will
occur within the next fifty years.
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44Seismic Zones
- The Uniform Building Code places San Diego in
Seismic Zone 4 - Buildings are required to withstand 1/3 more of
the lateral force from earthquakes that Seismic
Zone 3 mandates
45San Diego Seismic Standards
- San Diego has been required to enforce the State
Earthquake Protection Law (Riley Act) since its
enactment in 1933. However, the seismic
resistance requirements of the law were minimal
for many years and San Diego did not embrace more
restrictive seismic design standards until its
first adoption of the Uniform Building Code in
1951. - It is estimated that about 1,000 (mainly
nonresidential) masonry buildings within the City
may constitute structural hazards.
46Structural Design and Seismic Performance
- Ductile steel and ductile reinforced concrete
frame buildings (as defined in Uniform Building
Code) - highly resistant to structural damage
may suffer nonstructural damage. - Vertical load-bearing steel and reinforced
concrete frame buildings braced against lateral
forces - perform well but may suffer some
structural as well as nonstructural damage. - Unreinforced masonry buildings of all types -
highly vulnerable to damage.
47Structural Design and Seismic Performance
- Reinforced brick and concrete block masonry
buildings - perform well but may suffer some
structural as well as nonstructural damage. - Pre-engineered and other light steel and sheet
metal buildings - usually perform extremely well. - Residential buildings - Traditional wood frames
with wood or stucco siding usually behave well
but may suffer damage. Modern design open-type
houses with large glass openings, split-level
houses, and two-story houses or apartments with
large garage openings in the first story are
vulnerable to earthquake damage.
48probability of being exceeded in 50 years
49 Tsunami
- Seismic sea wave (not a tidal wave)
- Disturbing forces vertical movement of seafloor
- Offshore faults subduction zone earthquakes
- Submarine landslides
- Volcanic eruptions
- Meteorite impact
- Size
- Wavelength 125 miles (200 km)
- Wave height
- Coast 10s of meters (largest are 30-40 m or
100 ft.) - Open ocean 1 meter (3 ft)
- Velocity
- Open ocean 450 mph
- Slow as they approach coastlines
- Distance of travel across oceans (1000s of km)
50Waves
- Deep Water Waves
- Those waves traveling with a water depth greater
than ½ the wavelength - The speed of deep-water waves depends on the
wavelength of the waves. Waves with a longer
wavelength travels at higher speed.
51Waves
- Shallow Water Waves
- Those waves traveling with a water depth less
than 1/20th of the wavelength. - The speed is independent of their wavelength. It
depends, however, on the depth of the water.
52- Average wavelength for a wind wave is
- 100 meters (300 ft), tsunami is 100 miles.
- Wavelength decreases and wave height increases
as waves - approach the coast
- Usually more than one wave, the first is not
always the biggest!
53 A 10 meter (30 ft) tsunami wave has a lot more
energy than a 10 m wind wave
54Pacific Ocean has had more tsunami events than
any other ocean or sea.
551m 3ft
4000 deaths from tsunami waves around the
Pacific from 1990 to 2000.
56- Chile, South America 1960
- 9.5 subduction earthquake
- largest earthquake recorded
- Tsunami traveled to
- Hawaii and Japan
57CHILE 1960 SUBDUCTION EARTHQUAKE
- A piece of the Pacific seafloor (Nazca Plate)
about the size of California slid fifty feet
beneath the continent of South America. - South American continent offshore snapped
upwards as much as 20 ft. while land along the
Chile coast dropped about ten feet. - The tsunami caused tremendous damage along the
Chile coast, where about 2,000 people died. - The waves spread outwards across the Pacific. 15
hours later the waves flooded Hilo, on the island
of Hawaii, where they built up to thirty feet and
caused 61 deaths along the waterfront. - Seven hours after that (22 hours after the
earthquake) the waves flooded the coastline of
Japan where ten-foot waves caused 200 deaths. - The waves also caused damage in New Zealand.
Tide gauges throughout the Pacific measured
anomalous oscillations for about three days as
the waves bounced from one side of the ocean to
the other.
58- In San Diego ferry service was interrupted
after one passenger-laden ferry smashed into the
dock at Coronado knocking out eight pilings. - A second ferry was forced 1.5 km off course and
into a flotilla of anchored destroyers. More than
80 m of dock were destroyed. - A 100 ton dredge rammed the concrete pilings
supporting the Mission Bay bridge tearing out a
21 m section. - A 45 m bait barge smashed eight slips at the
Seaforth Landing before breaking in half and
sinking. - The currents swept away two sections of dockage
at the Southwest Yacht Club at Point Loma.
59Wave damage in Hilo Hawaii
60DART Deep-ocean Assessment and Reporting of
Tsunamis Early detection and real-time reporting
of tsunamis in the open ocean
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62- In addition to subduction zone earthquakes, what
else could cause a tsunami in Pacific Ocean? - Submarine landslides
- Where?
63Each slide has resulted in huge land losses to
the islands and resulted in large waves that have
carried rocks and sediments as high as 1000 ft
above sea level. The giant Hawaiian landslides
are important to study because, although they
occur infrequently, they have potential for
enormous loss of life, property, and resources.
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