Recording an Earthquake

记录地震

New Concept English 4, Fluency in English

语言学习

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  • Lesson 42

  • Recording an earthquake

  • What does a pen have to do to record on paper the vibrations generated by an earthquake?

  • An earthquake comes like a thief in the night, without warning.

  • It was necessary, therefore, to invent instruments that neither slumbered nor slept.

  • Some devices were quite simple.

  • One, for instance, consisted of rods of various lengths and thicknesses which would stand up on end like ninepins.

  • When a shock came, it shook the rigid table upon which these stood.

  • If it were gentle, only the more unstable rods fell.

  • If it were severe, they all fell.

  • Thus the rods, by falling, and by the direction in which they fell,

  • recorded for the slumbering scientist the strength of a shock that was too weak to waken him,

  • and the direction from which it came.

  • But instruments far more delicate than that were needed if any really serious advance was to be made.

  • The ideal to be aimed at was to devise an instrument that could record with a pen on paper,

  • the movements of the ground or of the table as the quake passed by.

  • While I write my pen moves, but the paper keeps still.

  • With practice, no doubt, I could in time learn to write by holding the pen still while the paper moved.

  • That sounds a silly suggestion,

  • but that was precisely the idea adopted in some of the early instruments (seismometers) for recording earthquake waves.