Understanding earthquakes and volcanoes...with snack foods!

*This blog was updated July 2022


We loved this blog from our friends at RedCrossPDX in Oregon, we decided to post it:

There are some easy ways to demonstrate how volcanoes and earthquakes work! Last year I was fortunate to work with Oregon State's Robert Lillie, a Professor of Geology and Public Interpretation.

To help the public understand how earthquakes and volcanoes are created with plate tectonics, he developed some simple visuals using snack foods. We will discuss plate boundaries using double-stuffed Oreo cookies.

Sliding plate over asthenosphere A) Divergent plate boundary
A child holding a broken Oreo cookie A child's hands bolding a broken Oreo cookie.
B) Convergent plate boundary C) Transform plate boundary
A child holding a broken Oreo cookie A child's hands bolding a broken Oreo cookie.

Simulating plate boundaries with Oreo cookies. The upper cookie is the lithosphere, the creamy filling the asthenosphere, and the lower cookie the lower mantle. Carefully remove the upper cookie with a “twisting” motion. Slide the upper cookie over the creamy filling to simulate motion of a rigid lithospheric plate over the softer asthenosphere. Next, break the upper cookie in half. As you do so, listen to the sound it makes. What does that sound represent? An earthquake. It takes cold, brittle lithosphere to make earthquakes – earthquakes do not occur in the soft, flowing asthenosphere.

a) Divergent plate boundary, push down on the two broken cookie halves and slide them apart. Notice that the creamy filling between the two broken “plates” may tend to flow upward, similar to the rising, decompression, and partial melting of hot asthenosphere at mid-ocean ridges and continental rift zones. (Ex: Iceland)

b) Convergent plate boundary, push one cookie piece beneath the other. This is the only situation where the cold, brittle lithosphere extends to great depths, and hence the only place where deep earthquakes occur. The very largest earthquakes are at subduction zones where two plates get stuck together for centuries, then suddenly let go. (Ex: Western Oregon)

c) Transform plate boundary, slide the two cookie pieces laterally past one another, over the creamy filling. You can feel and hear that the “plates” do not slide smoothly past one another, but rather stick then let go, stick then let go. (Ex: San Andreas Fault in California)

Additionally, a Hotspot can be simulated with the demonstration in the upper left photo. Imagine if a piece of hot, glowing coal were embedded in the creamy filling – a chain of “volcanoes” would be burned into the overriding cookie. (Ex: The Hawaiian Islands, Yellowstone). For more information, click here!

Earthquakes can happen without warning. Be prepared for earthquakes in Canada. Know what to do before, during and after an earthquake.



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