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Tsunami-causing earthquake yields new data about Earth's core
Oscillations begun by the earthquake that caused the devastating tsunami in South Asia in December 2004 are providing important information about the composition of the Earth as well as the size and duration of the earthquake, according to a report in the journal Science by an international group of scientists led by Professor Jeffrey J. Park of Yale's Department of Geology and Geophysics.
"Just like thumping a watermelon to hear if it is ripe, after a big earthquake thumps our planet we measure the natural tones from seismograms to detect properties of Earth's deep mantle and core," says Park. "The Sumatra-Andaman earthquake produced the best documentation of Earth's free oscillations ever recorded."
Free oscillations have natural periods that depend on the composition and temperature of Earth's deep interior, and cause tiny distortions in the shape of the planet.
"This earthquake may resolve several controversies, such as whether a heavy slagheap of old tectonic plates is stuck near the core-mantle boundary beneath Africa, or even whether microscopic crystals of pure iron in Earth's inner core are aligned with the rotation axis," says Park.
Seismic waves from the 9.0-magnitude Sumatra earthquake reached a monitoring station in Sri Lanka within four minutes and caused the ground to rise and fall 3.6 inches (nine centimeters); it registered on seismometers worldwide within 21 minutes. To give a sense of relative magnitudes, the Northridge, California quake in 1994 lasted 20 seconds or less, while the data of Park and his collaborators supports a model of the Sumatra-Andaman earthquake that lasted about 10 minutes. The rupture moved massive slabs of rock at least 65 feet (20 meters) covering the longest distance ever recorded, over 800 miles (1,300 kilometers) -- the equivalent of the distance from Florida to New England.
"The terrible damage and loss of life wrought by this earthquake humbles the most dispassionate observer, as does the strong likelihood that one or more [similar] earthquakes will occur elsewhere in the coming century," says Park. In the 1950s and 1960s, there were three earthquakes of this magnitude in the area near the sparsely inhabited Aleutian Islands.
The first report of free oscillations was from hand-digitized analogue recordings of the 9.0+ magnitude Chilean earthquake on May 22, 1960. The seismic records from the 1960s events were fragmentary, because the technology of the time could not record all earthquake motions. When seismic waves from the largest earthquakes arrived at the old-design seismometers, they simply jumped off-scale or even broke. More recently, digital recordings of smaller, deeper quakes have better records of free oscillations and more accurate reference models of Earth's interior.
The Sumatra-Andaman earthquake tested the current global digital broadband technology. More than 400 stations around the world provided data, including a site at the South Pole with a seismometer buried deep in the ice sheet.
With the network now online, and with the planned addition of more seismograph locations into the system, strong seismic events in the future can be continuously monitored in unprecedented detail from the instant when the first signals arrive at monitoring stations, notes Park. Oscillation studies, in combination with other geodetic information, can be applied to seismically active regions worldwide.
Other authors on the article are Teh-Ru Alex Song, Jeroen Tromp and Hiroo Kanamori of the California Institute of Technology; Emile Okal and Seth Stein of Illinois University; Genevieve Roult and Eric Clevede of IPGP, Paris; Gabi Laske, Peter Davis and Jon Berger of the Scripps Institute; Carla Braitenberg of the University of Trieste; Michel Van Camp of the Royal Observatory of Belgium; Xiang'e Lei, Heping Sun and Houze Xu of the Chinese Academy of Sciences; and Severine Rosat of the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan.
The work was supported by The National Science Foundation and the U.S. Geological Survey. For more information, visit www.iris.iris.edu/sumatra.
-- By Janet Rettig Emanuel
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