Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Tectonic–climatic interaction is the interrelationship between tectonic processes and the climate system. The tectonic processes in question include orogenesis, volcanism, and erosion, while relevant climatic processes include atmospheric circulation, orographic lift, monsoon circulation and the rain shadow effect.
A volcano tectonic earthquake or volcano earthquake is caused by the movement of magma beneath the surface of the Earth. [1] The movement results in pressure changes where the rock around the magma has a change in stress. At some point, this stress can cause the rock to break or move. This seismic activity is used by scientists to monitor ...
A relationship between earthquakes and volcanoes had been noted, although the causes were not known. Fault lines and earthquakes tended to happen along the boundaries of the shifting "boiler plates", but the folding of mountains indicated that sometimes the plates buckled. [2]
Understanding the principle of isostasy is a key element to understanding the interactions and feedbacks shared between erosion and tectonics. The principle of isostasy states that when free to move vertically, lithosphere floats at an appropriate level in the asthenosphere so that the pressure at a depth of compensation in the asthenosphere well below the base of the lithosphere is the same. [3]
Seismotectonics is the study of the relationship between earthquakes, active tectonics, and individual faults in a region. It seeks to understand which faults are responsible for seismic activity in an area by analysing a combination of regional tectonics, recent instrumentally recorded events, accounts of historical earthquakes, and ...
The latter may be directly accessible in the eroded portions of active volcanoes or, more commonly, in extinct eroded volcanoes. The general aim of Volcano-Tectonics is to capture the shallower and deeper structure of volcanoes, establishing the overall stress-strain relationships between the magma and the host rock, to ultimately understand ...
Endogenous processes such as volcanoes, earthquakes, and tectonic uplift can expose continental crust to the exogenous processes of weathering, erosion, and mass wasting. The effects of denudation have been recorded for millennia but the mechanics behind it have been debated for the past 200 years [ when? ] and have only begun to be understood ...
Volcanic earthquakes, or volcanic-tectonic earthquakes, can be caused by the movement of magma or other volcanic fluids, inducing tectonic stress that leads to earthquakes of high frequency. Lower frequency volcanic earthquakes, a result of resonation (physical oscillation from seismic waves) in cracks due to magma movement, may also be ...