A team from the
The 2005
Now the scientists
from the
Departments of Geology and Geography at the
The scientists have
pioneered use
of the laser probe to map active fault systems in
The
Dr. Dickson
Cunningham in the
Department of Geology and Dr. Kevin Tansey in the Department of
Geography
collaborated on a NERC funded project to map the distribution of
recently
active earthquake-prone faults in the southeastern Alps in
Their key research results are now published in the latest issue of Geophysical Research Letters. The work was further supported by a Masters student in Geography, Stephen Grebby.
Dr. Cunningham said: "Locating earthquake-prone faults in forested mountainous regions and understanding the potential seismic hazard they pose to local population centers has always been a problem to geoscientists.
"Many regions of the world have undiscovered seismically active faults hidden by dense forests, including Indonesia, India, NW North America, all Andean nations and the alpine countries of Europe. Unfortunately for people living in these regions, these faults can be ticking time bombs.
"We have demonstrated that airborne LiDAR can be used in mountainous terrain to virtually deforest the landscape and reveal details of the forest floor topography, including the traces of active faults."
Dr. Cunningham
reports that the
research involved collaborative efforts with Slovenian geoscientists
and
InfoTerra, a global geo-information supplier based in
The topographic
images derived
from LiDAR data of two major plate boundary faults, the Idrija and
Ravne
strike-slip faults in
He added: "For the first time, we are able to see how the faults connect at the surface and cut the landscape. This allows us to assess whether the faults are likely to produce large earthquakes or small events in the future. The images also allow efficient identification of sites suitable for detailed fault analysis to calculate the recurrence interval of major earthquakes and make probabilistic estimates of the timing and magnitude of the next major earthquake."
A field excursion in
August 2006
verified the remote observations. Dr. Tansey said: "As we trekked
through
the forest we found overwhelming evidence for previous fault activity,
never
before seen by earth scientists. We are now building on our initial
results
with follow-up research and have established the
##
Contact:
Dr.
Dickson Cunningham
University
of
Leicester
44-116-252-3649
wdc2@le.ac.uk
This text derived from: