February 28, 2007
A 17-year
The $2.3 million
study, which
used Global Positioning System (GPS) satellites to measure horizontal
and
vertical motions of Earth’s crust from 1987 to 2004, found
that the gigantic
underground plume of molten rock known as the
"The Yellowstone
hotspot has
had a much bigger effect over a larger area with more energy than ever
expected," says
"We’re
seeing large-scale
deformation of the Earth’s crust in the western
The study was
conducted by
Puskas, Smith,
The new study is
based on
measurements made from 1987 until 2004. The measurements included 17
one- to
three-month-long "campaigns," during which portable GPS receivers
were placed for two to 10 days each at 90 to 140 benchmarks in the
Yellowstone-Teton-eastern
Snake River Plain region of
GPS allows precise surveying of ground movements because two-dozen Navstar GPS satellites orbiting Earth broadcast time signals. GPS receivers on the ground record the signals, making it possible to triangulate each receiver’s location to within a few tenths of an inch horizontally and vertically.
Restless Volcanic Caldera Huffs and Puffs
The study summarizes
the
movements of the floor of the 45-by-30-mile Yellowstone caldera
– a gigantic
volcanic crater formed by a catastrophic eruption 642,000 years ago
that spread
volcanic ash over half of North America and was 1,000 times bigger than
the
1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens in Washington state. Other huge
Due to underground movement of molten rock and hot water, calderas often huff upward and puff downward for tens of thousands of years without catastrophic eruptions.
Earlier research
found that a
flattened chamber of partly molten rock extends from about 5 miles
beneath the
Conventional
surveying of
The GPS data show
the
Smith and Puskas believe the caldera sank when hot water, steam and gases migrated northwest out of the caldera and to the Norris area, making that area rise.
While not part of the new published study, Smith reported at an American Geophysical Union meeting last December that 2004-2006 GPS measurements show the northwest caldera area sank by 3.2 inches, but the central caldera floor rose faster than ever recorded: about 6.7 inches since mid-2004.
"The rate is
unprecedented,
at least in terms of what scientists have been able to observe in
Puskas adds: "This episode may represent a period like those observed at other large volcanic systems such as Long Valley caldera, California, where episodes of unrest have lasted one to four years, with uplift rates as high as 4 inches a year."
The fact some GPS receivers now are permanently installed in Yellowstone and provide data daily made researchers realize that ups-and-downs of the caldera occur not just in decades or years, but in months, reflecting underground movements of molten rock and hot water that "also happen over months," Puskas says.
Hotspot’s Bulge May Explain a New Mystery on the Teton Fault
The
Smith and Puskas say 1987-2004 GPS measurements show the southwest part of the Yellowstone Plateau is slowly sliding downhill to the southwest at about one-sixth inch per year. That may explain the study’s biggest surprise: ground along the Teton fault moves opposite the expected direction.
The fault runs 40
miles
north-south along the eastern base of the
The vertical
movement totals
about 3 to 6 feet during a single magnitude-7 quake. Previous evidence
indicates there were thousands of magnitude-7 to 7.5 quakes during the
past 13
million years, lifting the tallest Teton peaks to altitudes of more
than 13,000
feet – almost 7,000 feet above Jackson Hole. Such a quake
today would be a
major disaster for
Yet 17 years of GPS measurements show "the textbook model for a normal fault is not what’s happening at the Teton fault," Smith says. "The mountains are going down relative to the valley going up. That’s a total surprise."
The results – Jackson Hole moved west one-quarter inch and upward 1.7 inches from 1987 to 2004 – mean the Teton Range and Jackson Hole valley are being squeezed together rather than stretched apart, as was expected.
Smith believes the
bulging
Yellowstone hotspot, located north of the Tetons, may be "pushing
Jackson
Hole into the
"The question is how do you store the stress that is leading to the next big earthquake?" Smith says. "It might include episodes of compression and stretching, and eventually the dominant Basin and Range stretching prevails" to trigger a big quake.
Slow Deformation Overpowers Quick Earthquakes
During the new study, Puskas converted GPS-measured ground movements and records of historic earthquake magnitudes into a quantity known as a "moment," which measures the energy expended to deform the landscape. That allowed her to compare total ground deformation measured by GPS with ground deformation caused by quakes.
She found the
ground-moving
energy of
Smith says the fact non-seismic forces to overwhelm quake energies by 10-to-1 "means there is much more energy related to active volcanic processes of uplift and extension of the Earth’s surface," he says.
An example: The
southwestern
Yellowstone Plateau is moving southwest at one-sixth inch per year,
twice as
fast as the next block of land to the southwest: the eastern Snake
River Plain.
Land from
##
Contact:
Lee
Siegel
University
of
Utah
801-581-8993
leesiegel@ucomm.utah.edu
This
text derived from:
http://www.unews.utah.edu/