History of seismology—the ancients • Bronze age cultural History of seismology • History of seismology—the ancients • Other global ideas • Aristotle: quakes • produced by collision of subterranean winds, described in “Meteorologica”, ~340 BC Wind/gas model lasts until ~1700’s (!) History of seismology—the West • Much Western • science in seismically inactive regions, so seismology slow to grow in the West Lisbon earthquake, 1755 kills >70,000. Starts “modern” era of seismology. centers (Megiddo) collapsed over ~50 years…may have been string of earthquakes So earthquakes were prevalent. What did people think about them? History of seismology—the East • First “seismoscope” • • built by Chinese in 132 BC Chinese have recorded every moderate to large quake since 780 BC Japan catalog complete since 1600, less complete since 416 AD Lisbon, 11/1/1755: the first modern earthquake Marquis sent out questionnaire to parishes asking about aftershocks, earthquake duration, damage, well water, animal behavior, and aftershocks. 1 Lisbon, 11/1/1755: the first modern earthquake Lisbon, 11/1/1755: the first modern earthquake Astronomer John Mitchell calculates velocity of seismic wave to be ~500 m/s (slow, but not impossible) Marquis Astronomer Enormously sent John influential out questionnaire Mitchell in European calculates to parishes religion velocity asking and of about seismic aftershocks, thought wave (Rousseau, to be earthquake ~500Voltaire, m/sduration, (slow, Kant) but damage, not well water, animalimpossible) behavior, and aftershocks. History of seismology History of seismology • Seismological theory develops • Seismological theory develops in 1800’s • 1883—G. K. Gilbert in 1800’s •1821-22, equations for elasticity (Navier and Cauchy) •1830—Poisson calculates that 2 • types of waves (only) travel through homogeneous solids (P and S waves) 1859—Robert Mallet associates quakes with “the breaking up and grinding over each other of rocky beds” History of seismology • Development of instrumentation • 1875—first seismometer (detects and records • • • • • earthquake vibrations) built by Filippo Cecchi in Italy 1889—first distant recording of earthquake (quake in Japan, recorded in Germany) 1892—John Milne leads development of first portable. Starts era of global seismology 1906—dozens of seismographs around the world record SF quake. A great example from 1964. • associates earthquakes with faults! 1887, 1911—Lord Rayleigh and Augustus E. H. Love demonstrate existence of waves at free surface (surface waves) 1906—H. F. Reid uses offsets from SF quake to develop elastic rebound theory History of seismology • Development of instrumentation • 1875—first seismometer (detects and records • • • • earthquake vibrations) built by Filippo Cecchi in Italy 1889—first distant recording of earthquake (quake in Japan, recorded in Germany) 1892—John Milne leads development of first portable. Starts era of global seismology 1906—dozens of seismographs around the world record SF quake. A great example from 1964. 2 More advances in instrumentation • Development of digital instruments • Development of ocean-bottom instruments • Development of broadband instruments • Development of world wide web • Advances in computational power History of seismology • Major discoveries using seismic waves •1906—Richard Oldham discovers the core •1909—Andrija Mohorovičić discovers the Moho •1936—Inge Lehmann discovers the inner core Other discoveries/developments Other discoveries/developments • 1935—Charles Richter develops “Richter scale” • 1935—Charles Richter develops “Richter scale” • • • • • for measuring strength of S. Californian earthquakes 1946—First nuclear explosion recorded by a seismograph 1969—seismometer placed on moon 1977—Moment magnitude scale proposed by Hiroo Kanamori 1996—CTBT established. Need for global seismic monitoring to confirm adherence to treaty Other discoveries/developments • • • for measuring strength of S. Californian earthquakes 1946—First nuclear explosion recorded by a seismograph 1969—seismometer placed on moon 1977—Moment magnitude scale proposed by Hiroo Kanamori 1996—CTBT established. Need for global seismic monitoring to confirm adherence to treaty Other discoveries/developments • 1935—Charles Richter develops “Richter scale” • 1935—Charles Richter develops “Richter scale” • • • • • for measuring strength of S. Californian earthquakes 1946—First nuclear explosion recorded by a seismograph 1969—seismometer placed on moon 1977—Moment magnitude scale proposed by Hiroo Kanamori 1996—CTBT established. Need for global seismic monitoring to confirm adherence to treaty • • • for measuring strength of S. Californian earthquakes 1946—First nuclear explosion recorded by a seismograph 1969—seismometer placed on moon 1977—Moment magnitude scale proposed by Hiroo Kanamori 1996—CTBT established. Need for global seismic monitoring to confirm adherence to treaty 3 History of seismology • Often driven by major earthquakes •San Francisco, 1906—faulting/elastic rebound •Tokyo, 1923—engineering •Chile, 1960—Earth normal modes •Haicheng, 1975—prediction? •Mexico City, 1985--Amplification •Northridge, 1994--$$ •Kobe, 1995—more engineering •Denali, 2002—triggered seis/directivity •Sumatra, 2004—tsunami, long period waves 4
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