• HOME
  • 독일교육연구정보
http://www.whoi.edu/mr/pr.do?id=3599Predicting when large earthquakes might occur may be a step closer to reality, thanks to a new study of undersea earthquakes in the eastern Pacific Ocean. The study, reported in today’s Nature, is the first to suggest that small seismic shocks or foreshocks preceding a major earthquake can be used in some cases to predict the main tremors.

Scientists from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) and the University of Southern California (USC) report that some types of large undersea earthquakes may be predictable on time scales of hours or less. Earthquakes on land are generally not preceded by systematic immediate foreshocks and hence cannot be predicted as easily with the same methods.

The research team, led by Jeffrey McGuire of WHOI, studied past earthquakes along five transform faults on the East Pacific Rise, where tectonic plates are spreading apart at a rate of more than ten centimeters or five inches a year. The team used data from sensors deployed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory that pinpointed the time and location of foreshocks and the mainshocks or larger earthquakes.

"This is the first demonstration of good short-term predictability for big earthquakes," study coauthor Thomas Jordan of the USC Southern California Earthquake Center said. "Some scientists believe that earthquakes come on suddenly with no warning signs, and the big ones are therefore unpredictable. In other parts of the oceans, they may be."

The researchers defined a foreshock as any tremor of at least a magnitude 2.5 on the Richter scale, and a mainshock as a tremor of magnitude 5.4 or greater. Using earthquakes that occurred in the last ten years as a test case, they set up a hypothetical “alert” for an hour within a 15-kilometer (about ten-mile) radius of the epicenter of every potential foreshock. This “early-warning system” would have successfully predicted six of the nine major earthquakes that occurred along two of transform faults, Discovery and Gofar, between 1996 and 2001, despite having alerts in a very small percentage of the total time period.

The team’s findings suggest that short-term prediction - the ability to forecast an earthquake in the hours or minutes before it hits - may be feasible under certain circumstances. McGuire says that although mid-ocean ridges and associated transform faults are far from main population centers on land, the fact that a degree of short-term predictability exists in the deep sea should help seismologists better understand the earthquake process in general.

McGuire says a new generation of ocean bottom instrumentation, a major technical challenge, will help scientists improve understanding of the earthquake process. “If both foreshocks and mainshocks are triggered by an earlier event, which could be a gradual slipping along a fault line, technically known as an aseismic slow slip transient that doesn’t create seismic waves, then it could be detected with the right instruments.”

Such slow events can be detected on land at places like the San Andreas Fault, where movement is recorded by an extensive array of sensors. In the deep sea, slow slip transients have been detected in subduction zones, where one tectonic plate is thrust under another. Such events have been detected off Japan and along the Cascadia Fault off the Pacific Northwest. However ,the detected events did not trigger major earthquakes.

The researchers note that subduction zones have higher foreshock rates than continental regions, so the ability to detect foreshocks, even on a short-term basis, has significance in earthquake prediction. Moreover, a slow slip transient was detected 15 minutes before the 1960 Chilean earthquake, at magnitude 9.5 the largest in recorded history.

Most major earthquakes occur along subduction zones, but whether earthquakes on subduction zones can be predicted systematically remains controversial and will require improved seafloor-based observations.

The researchers say that if an extensive array of sensors like that along the San Andreas Fault were placed on the sea floor, seismologists would likely see the earthquake coming. McGuire will lead an expedition in 2007 to deploy sensors along the East Pacific Rise and begin testing that idea.

The study was supported by the Frank and Lisina Hoch Endowed Fund and the Deep Ocean Exploration Institute at WHOI, the National Science Foundation, the Southern California Earthquake Center, and the U.S. Geological Survey.


번호 제목 글쓴이 날짜 조회 수
247 베를린 올림픽 구장-삼성구장으로 이름바뀌나? VeKNI 2005.05.04 16266
246 폴클스바겐, 폴로 VeKNI 2005.05.04 13840
245 무료 인터넷 백과사전 Wikipedia 종이책형태로도 발간 VeKNI 2005.05.02 13485
244 에어버스 대 보잉, AIRBUS VS. BOEING, Kampf der Konzepte VeKNI 2005.04.28 12247
243 메레체데스 B 클라스 VeKNI 2005.04.27 11191
242 라이카 카메라의 마지막? Blende zu VeKNI 2005.04.26 11479
241 무어의 법칙, 인텔 옛날잡지를 만달러에 사다. Intel bezahlt 10.000 Dollar für eine "Electronics"-Ausgabe VeKNI 2005.04.26 38234
240 중국산 자동차 유럽상륙? Chery attackiert europäischen Markt VeKNI 2005.04.22 22043
239 무선전화 사용료 인하 경쟁--"Der Preiskampf ist noch nicht zu Ende" VeKNI 2005.04.21 23336
238 독일내 인터넷 사용료 인하추세-Der Druck steigt, die Preise fallen VeKNI 2005.04.21 15036
237 삼성 이익 반토막---Samsungs Gewinn halbiert sich VeKNI 2005.04.16 16550
236 폴클스바겐, 1 리터 자동차 중단--VW stoppt Ein-Liter-Auto VeKNI 2005.04.16 17103
235 노무현 대통령 die Welt 인터뷰 "Druck auf Nordkorea wird die Lage verschlechtern" VeKNI 2005.04.14 13763
234 새로운 재독 한국대사관 건설-Spatenstich für Südkoreas neue Vertretung im Diplomatenviertel VeKNI 2005.04.14 20622
233 슈레더의 중국정책 VeKNI 2005.04.02 15071
232 자동차사들 배기먼지 필터 필수화 움직임--Autobauer treiben Einbau von Rußpartikelfiltern voran VeKNI 2005.03.31 18929
231 새 메레체데스 R 클라스 소개---MERCEDES-BENZ R-KLASSE VeKNI 2005.03.29 14180
230 30미터 자동차---30-METER-AUTO VeKNI 2005.03.27 12245
» Deep-Sea Tremors May Provide Early Warning System for Larger Earthquakes VeKNI 2005.03.26 22868
228 독일 월드컵 관계자 그렌다이저 탄다--Flaggschiff für Funktionäre VeKNI 2005.03.16 26216
CLOSE