Topic 1 Part 1
Across
- 2. Smaller seismic events that follow a main earthquake.
- 5. The exact underground point where rock fractures and slips, marking the physical origin of an earthquake.
- 7. Using specialised tracking equipment to identify high-risk areas before a tectonic event occurs.
- 8. A numerical scale from 1 to 10 used to measure the magnitude or energy released during a seismic event.
- 12. A sudden disturbance within the Earth's crust that releases energy and generates seismic vibrations propagating outward from a central source.
- 13. Massive sea waves triggered by underwater tectonic displacement.
- 14. Tools that use a high-tension wire stretched directly across a fault line to warn scientists of soil and fault movement.
- 16. A gravitational force at mid-ocean ridges where buoyant, newly formed crust cools, becomes denser, and slides downward away from the ridge crest.
- 18. The process where a denser oceanic plate is forced to slide beneath a less dense continental plate and sink deep into the mantle.
- 19. Immediate effects occurring during the ground-shaking event, such as structural collapse, casualties, and ground cracking.
Down
- 1. The scientific theory proposed by Alfred Wegener stating that Earth's continents have moved over geological time relative to each other.
- 3. The point on the Earth's surface located directly above the focus, typically experiencing the most intense shaking.
- 4. Ranging devices that track microscopic horizontal shifts in the earth by timing a laser reflection across a fault line.
- 6. An instrument used to pick up, track, and translate ground vibrations into a written chart.
- 9. A hazardous phenomenon where violent shaking of loose, water-saturated soils forces water to the surface, instantly turning solid ground into weak, liquid mud.
- 10. Monitoring sudden spikes in naturally escaping radon gas, which indicates that rocks are fracturing under immense pressure prior to a quake.
- 11. A gravitational mechanism where the heavy, leading edge of a dense tectonic plate sinks into the mantle at a subduction zone, dragging the rest of the plate behind it.
- 15. Consequences that occur after and as a direct result of primary impacts, including tsunamis, fires, and disease outbreaks.
- 17. Proactive steps taken to reduce the effects and damage of a natural hazard rather than trying to stop the event itself.