Volcanoes and Earthquakes Simplified Revision Notes for GCSE AQA Geography
Revision notes with simplified explanations to understand Volcanoes and Earthquakes quickly and effectively.
Learn about Tectonic Hazards for your GCSE Geography Exam. This Revision Note includes a summary of Tectonic Hazards for easy recall in your Geography exam
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1.2.3 Volcanoes and Earthquakes
Volcanoes and Earthquakes
Where do Volcanoes Occur?
Sixty percent of all active volcanoes occur at the boundaries between tectonic plates.
Most volcanoes are found along a belt, called the "Ring of Fire" that encircles the Pacific Ocean.
Some volcanoes, like those that form the Hawaiian Islands, occur in the interior of plates at areas called "hot spots."
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Volcanoes occur at Destructive and Constructive plate margins
Where do Earthquakes Occur?
Earthquakes are caused by the tension that builds up at all 3 plate margins:
Destructive Plate Margin: Earthquakes occur when the subducted oceanic plate scrapes against the continental as it slides underneath.
Constructive Plate Margins: Tension builds along cracks within the plates.
Conservative: Tension builds when plates sliding past each other get stuck.
World's Most Earthquake-Prone Areas
Earthquakes Occur at all 4 Plate Margins
The Moment Magnitude Scale
Measures the amount of energy released by an earthquake (called magnitude) [we used to call this the Richter Scale].
The Moment Magnitude Scale is logarithmic - so a magnitude 7 earthquake (like Nepal) is 10 times more powerful than a 6 (like New Zealand).
The plates eventually jerk past each other causing shockwaves.
The shockwaves spread out from the focus (the point in the earth where the earthquake starts).
If the focus is shallow then the waves are stronger and cause more damage.
The epicentre is the point on the earth's surface directly above the focus.
Earthquakes and Volcanoes have Many Serious Effects
Primary Effects:
Immediate effects of a disaster (i.e., impacts of the ground shaking in an earthquake).
Secondary Effects:
Happen later on, often as a result of the primary effect.
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Summary:
Volcanoes occur mainly at plate boundaries and hotspots.
Earthquakes occur due to tension at plate margins.
The Moment Magnitude Scale measures earthquake energy logarithmically.
Earthquakes and volcanoes have significant primary and secondary effects.
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