Teachable Moments: Earthquakes
The United States Geological Survey is an amazing site where students can retrieve primary source data to use in your classroom discussions and projects on the topic. For example:
? Students may feel nervous and uneasy. They may fear the possibility of a quake where they live. Use the USGS site (under “Location” in the left-hand nav) to see a history of earthquake activity where they live.
? It may seem to students that earthquakes are always huge deadly events. A quick check of the map displaying quakes that occurred in the last 8 to 30 days should help them to understand the prevalence of these events.
? Have you been teaching your students how to interpret earthquake data and need a few data sets? Click on any earthquake icon on any map on this site and get all of the data you could want – from historic moment tensor data to phase data to P-Wave travel times – here’s an example.
? Got the kids wondering how we know all this stuff? Take them on a tour of all of the United State’s monitoring equipment – complete with photographs of the actual equipment on location.
Can’t think of a good lesson to use in covering earthquakes? The USGS has you covered there as well. Check out the Students & Teachers section for lesson suggestions at all levels, from elementary through college.
This topic is easy to teach in a science class. Do you, dear reader, have any ideas how to address this teachable moment in the other disciplines?
Date: February 28, 2010
Categories: Teachable Moments, Uncategorized
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