These last-mentioned lines are wholly due to Mallet and Seebach.
Many words are used to distinguish different kinds of earthquakes from each other. All of these appear to be very indefinite and to depend upon the observer’s feelings, which, in turn, depend upon his nervous temperament and his situation.
In South America small earthquakes, consisting of a series of rapidly recurring vibratory movements not sufficiently powerful to create damage, are spoken of as trembelores.
The terremotos of South America are earthquakes of a destructive nature, in which distinct shocks are perceptible. It may be observed that shocks which at one place would be described as terremoto would at another and more distant place probably be described as trembelores.
The succussatore are the shocks where there is considerable vertical motion. The terrible shock of Riobamba (February 4, 1797), which is said to have thrown corpses from their graves to a height of 100 feet, was an earthquake of this order.
The vorticosi are shocks which have a twisting or rotatory motion.
Another method of describing earthquakes would be to refer to instrumental records. When the vibrations of the ground have only been along the line joining the observer and the epicentrum, the disturbance might be called ‘euthutropic.’ A disturbance in which the prominent movements are transverse to the above direction might be called ‘diagonic.’ If motions in both of these directions occur in the records, the shock might be said to be ‘diastrophic.’ If there be much vertical movement, the shock might be said to be ‘anaseismic.’ Some disturbances could only be described by using two or three of these terms.
CHAPTER II.
SEISMOMETRY.
Nature of earthquake vibrations—Many instruments called seismometers only seismoscopes—Eastern seismoscopes, columns, projection seismometers—Vessels filled with liquid—Palmieri’s mercury tubes—The ship seismoscope—The cacciatore—Pendulum instruments of Kreil, Wagner, Ewing, and Gray—Bracket seismographs—West’s parallel motion instrument—Gray’s conical pendulums, rolling spheres, and cylinders—Verbeck’s ball and plate seismograph—The principle of Perry and Ayrton—Vertical motion instruments—Record receivers—Time-recording apparatus—The Gray and Milne seismograph.