New technique may allow Earth’s seismic activity to be mapped more comprehensively
September 3rd, 2009 - 2:04 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, September 3 (ANI): Scientists have developed a new technique that uses data collected from earthquakes, potentially allowing the Earth’s seismic activity to be mapped more comprehensively.
Scientists from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, developed the new method.
Scientists currently monitor underground movements, such as earthquakes and nuclear tests, using seismometers - instruments that measure the motion of those events at the Earth’s surface.
This helps to indicate where they took place.
Now, by analyzing the seismic waves from two different earthquakes, the team has been able to simulate the seismic waves from one of the earthquakes as if they were recorded by a seismometer at the location of the second.
The discovery allows earthquakes themselves to be used as virtual seismometers that record passing waves from tremors that happen elsewhere in the world.
Using earthquakes in this way substantially increases the number of locations that could be used to detect seismic activity.
Since earthquakes occur deep inside the Earth, using them also allows scientists to monitor seismic activity from far deeper than previously possible.
According to Andrew Curtis, Professor of Mathematical Geoscience at the University of Edinburgh, “This turns the way we listen to seismic movements on its head. By using earthquakes themselves as virtual microphones that record the sound of the Earth’s internal movements, we can listen to the Earth’s stretching and cracking from directly within its most interesting, dynamic places.”
“This discovery shows how we can measure strains deep inside the Earth and helps improve our understanding of the processes driving earthquake activity,” said Dr Brian Baptie, Seismology Team Leader at the British Geological Survey. (ANI)
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Tags: andrew curtis, british geological survey, dr brian, dynamic places, earthquake activity, earthquakes, geoscience, microphones, nuclear tests, seismic activity, seismic waves, seismology, seismometer, seismometers, strains, team leader, tremors, underground movements, university of edinburgh, university of edinburgh scotland