jueves, 5 de junio de 2014

Earthquakes 101

Watch this short National Geographic video which explains earthquakes.

Self-study activity:
Watch the video and answer the questions below.

The activity is suitable for intermediate students.



1 When did the California earthquake happen?
2 How many people died?
3 How many earthquakes shake the Earth every day?
4 What device do scientists use to record earthquakes?
5 How many earthquakes do people feel in one year?
6 How much did the biggest earthquake ever recorded in America measure?
7 When was it?
8 What are engineers focusing on to make people feel safer when earthquakes strike?

You can check your answers by reading the transcript below.

April 18th, 1906. California’s San Andreas fault snaps, shaking San Francisco for nearly sixty terrifying seconds. When the trembling stops, the disaster is only beginning. Gas lines rupture, setting off massive fires. Some 700 people die… most of the city is reduced to ruins.
This trembling of the ground caused when masses of rock suddenly shift below the Earth’s surface is called an earthquake.
Hundreds of little earthquakes shake the planet every day but most pass unnoticed. They usually occur along the boundaries of the thin plates that cover the earth, like an eggshell. Driven by the heat deep within the Earth’s core, the plates grind against each other along lines called faults. When the plates’ motion is blocked, stress builds up. Finally, the fault gives way. The released energy races through the earth in the form of seismic waves.
Scientists record these waves on a device called a seismograph. These zig-zag lines show the strength of various seismic waves.
Using the lines, scientists grade earthquakes on the Richter Scale. For a quake to measure one number higher on the Richter Scale, it must release about 30 times as much energy as the number below it.
Every year, about 100,000 earthquakes rumble through the ground hard enough for people to feel them. Of these, only about a thousand are strong enough to damage property.
But a powerful earthquake can be devastating. On average, about 10,000 people die each year as a result of earthquakes.
The greatest recorded earthquake ever to hit North America measured a massive 9.2. The tremor struck Alaska on March 28th, 1964.
A camera on board a ship docked in Valdez recorded the draining of the entire harbor as a chasm opened up on the sea floor.
There’s no stopping the surface of the Earth from changing and moving. So engineers are focusing on ways to create better buildings, highways and bridges… structures that will remain safe and stay in one piece… the next time the Earth begins to shake.