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August
1, 2007
Tremor episodes
have long been observed near
volcanoes and more recently around subduction zones, regions where the
Earth's
tectonic plates are shifting so that one slides beneath another.
Tremors in
subduction zones are associated with slow-slip events in which energy
equivalent to a moderate-sized earthquake is released in days or weeks,
rather
than seconds. Now researchers
studying seismograph records
have pinpointed five tremor bursts on Vancouver Island on Nov. 3, 2002,
the
result of a magnitude-7.8 earthquake on the Denali fault in the heart
of As surface waves,
called Love waves, shook "What we found is
that when the waves
pushed the North American plate to the southwest, the tremor episode
turned on
and when the motion reversed it turned off," said Justin Rubinstein, a
UW
postdoctoral researcher in Earth and space sciences and lead author of
a paper
describing the work published in the Aug. 2 edition of Nature.
Though the Denali
quake was mostly felt in Still, finding
evidence of tremors on "A few people have
seen tremor episodes
triggered by earthquakes, but not as clearly as we have. This is by far
the
clearest and easiest to interpret," said co-author John Vidale, a UW
professor of Earth and space sciences and director of the Pacific
Northwest
Seismic Network. "This shows us
it's just like a regular
fault -- you add stress and it slips," Vidale said. "It's like
regular faulting but on a different time scale." Other authors are
Joan Gomberg of the U.S.
Geological Survey in Seattle and UW researchers Paul Bodin, Kenneth
Creager and
Stephen Malone. An earthquake
typically will appear suddenly
on a seismograph, while the much more subtle ground motion from a
tremor burst
gradually emerges from the background noise and then fades again,
Rubinstein
said. By comparison,
tremors typically produce the
strongest seismic signals in a slow-slip event, in which seismic energy
is
released very gradually during periods as long as three weeks. In this case, the
authors suggest that the
force of the Love waves induced slow slip on the interface between the
North
American and Explorer tectonic plates near "That made it
easier for us to observe
because there were these five distinct bursts," Rubinstein said.
"Normally you are not going to feel these tremors. The shaking in the
tremors we observed was 1,000 times smaller than the surface waves from
the
earthquake." Being able to spot
the tremors was largely a
matter of distance and timing, Vidale said. "We were able to
separate the tremor
signal from that of the distant earthquake because the surface waves
had
traveled more than 1,200 miles, losing the high-frequency vibrations
that would
have masked the high-frequency tremor vibrations," Vidale said. While the tremors
were recorded a great
distance from the rupture that triggered the Seismograph data
for the research came from
the Canadian National Seismograph Network and was distributed by the
Geological
Survey of Canada. ##
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