¶ … subduction zone is where two tectonic plates come together and one goes beneath the other. This is most common where an oceanic plate meets a continental plate, and the oceanic plate is pushed underneath the continental. As a result, subduction zones produce the biggest earthquakes in the world, and are also largely responsible for volcanic activity and tsunamis.
At the site of subduction, in which one tectonic plate (the oceanic) goes beneath another (the continental), an accretionary wedge can form. Essentially the upper tectonic plate scrapes off a wedge-shaped portion of sediment and other materials from the subducted plate.
A hot spot is a region below the earth's crust where the magma has an extremely high temperature. As a result the magma will melt the ocean floor creating a volcano, and ultimately a volcanic island. Because of the movement of the tectonic plates, the hot spot will create an arc of islands created from this volcanic activity, where the chain indicates the movement of the plates. The Hawaiian islands are an example of a volcanic island arc created by a stationary hot spot onto moving tectonic plates.
4. The intensity of an earthquake is a measurement of the amount of shaking and movement that is measured at any given location. As a result, any measurement of an earthquake's intensity is going to vary based on the overall distance from the earthquake's epicenter. An extremely strong earthquake centered in Los Angeles may very well be felt in San Diego, but it will be felt at a much lesser intensity in San Diego than it is felt in Los Angeles, or at any spot between the two. Intensity is therefore measured using the Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale, which is largely a descriptive scale. It is based on subjective factors that ordinary people can use to evaluate the earthquake. For example, an MM3 score indicates an earthquake that can be felt indoors as a light vibration and that may cause hanging objects to swing. An MM4, which is an increase in intensity, would entail feeling it indoors but not outdoors as a strong vibration or jolt, and it would cause windows or plates and glasses to rattle, but not fall or break. Magnitude, however, is an attempt to have a more objective scientific measurement of earthquakes, and is measured on the Richter or Moment Magnitude scale (both of which use similar numbers to indicate magnitude). It is measured not by personal observation but by the use of a seismometer. Magnitude scales measure the waves that are emanated from the earthquakes epicenter, and thus indicate the level of energy that is being released at the exact spot the earthquake occurs. As a result, the MM3 and MM4 earthquakes described above in terms of intensity would measure as between 2 and 3, or between 3 and 4, on the Richter scale. The strength of the intensity scale is that it allows ordinary people to describe earthquakes in terms of perceived effects, but the weakness is that it is dependent upon personal testimony. A magnitude scale is a more scientific measurement, but it will do very little to explain to the general public why a major earthquake in the middle of the ocean can be utterly unnoticed by human observers until a tsunami arrives several hours later.
5. The Dakota Sandstone is in a layer determined to be at the end of the Jurassic, right before the start of the Cretaceous. The Wasatch Formation is in a layer from the end of the Cretaceous, just before the start of the Paleogene. As a result we can estimate the Dakota Sandstone to be 145-157 million years old, and the Wasatch Formation to be about 66-100 million years old. This is based on the largest possible dates for the late Cretaceous and late Jurassic period but a comparison with other types of formation can probably narrow down the date much further.
6. Caldera is the Spanish word for cauldron, and it denotes a specific type of volcanic crater found generally in a large central volcano within an area of volcanic activity. It forms when the central magma chamber of the large volcano empties, often because of eruptions in the surrounding volcanic area, which suddenly causes the large central magma chamber to collapse downward, forming a large crater.
7. Magma is composed of molten minerals which will form crystals as the liquid rock cools. If the magma cools quickly, the crystals form quickly and will only form in small sizes. With slow-cooling magma,...
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