Scientists: Silent Tremors May Foretell 'Big One'

Posted: June 30, 2009

SANDI DOUGHTON,
The Seattle Times

SEQUIM, Wash.—The seismometer is snugged in its hole and tamped over with dirt.

Now it's time for the stomp test.

"This is the fun part," says University of Washington researcher Ken Creager, pounding his foot on the ground three times.

Graduate student Amanda Klaus consults a handheld screen.

"We've got three nice peaks," she says.

That means the instrument is working.

Creager and Klaus had four more sensors to install before dark on this chilly spring day. Several other teams were fanned out across this swath of forest, doing the same thing.

When the scientists' work is finished in July, 200 seismometers will blanket the Olympic Peninsula. The array is designed to zero in on tiny tremors that someday may provide a warning of mega-quakes like the one that devastated Indonesia in 2004 and which threaten the Pacific Northwest.

"This is the most exciting thing in seismology today," says Klaus, a Californian who left the earthquake state to be part of the UW team chasing the phenomenon some call silent quakes.

Research on what more properly is known as "episodic tremor and slip" (ETS) has mushroomed in the scant decade since its discovery by Japanese and Northwest scientists. The UW's $3 million array of specialized seismic equipment, on loan from the National Science Foundation, is the most ambitious attempt yet to figure out where the mysterious rumblings originate and what they might reveal about the risk of major earthquakes.

Some of the tremor data already hint that the next "big one" might strike closer than expected to Seattle and the region's other population centers.

"That's an unknown everybody is worrying about," said Tim Melbourne, of Central Washington University.

Melbourne was among the first in the region to document the "slip" part of episodic tremor and slip. Normally, Western Washington is shoved an inch or two northeast each year by the force of the offshore Juan de Fuca Plate colliding with and diving under the North American Plate at the Cascadia subduction zone. But every 14 months or so, GPS measurements show the land starts creeping in the opposite direction.

Herb Dragert and his colleagues at the Geological Survey of Canada in Sidney, B.C., soon linked these turnarounds to swarms of tremors so slight that scientists long mistook them for wind or other background noise.

It was as if doctors, who have been listening to people's chests for centuries, stumbled across an entirely new type of heart rhythm.

"There's just a sheer joy of discovery," Melbourne said.

After a couple of years of confusion and competing theories, scientists have patched together a basic picture of what they think must be going on: Deep under Vancouver Island and the Olympic Peninsula, where pressure and heat turn rock to taffy, the geologic plates that grind together at the subduction zone occasionally slip past each other. These silent quakes, which last for weeks, release as much energy as the magnitude-6.8 Nisqually earthquake that rocked Seattle in 2001 but they happen so slowly, no one notices.

"We can detect it instrumentally, but it doesn't shake the ground so that any person can feel it," UW seismologist John Vidale said.

But when the deep, malleable portion of the plates slips, that cranks up pressure on the most dangerous part of the subduction zone the segment near the surface where rocks are brittle and the plates are locked together. When the locked zone breaks loose, the result is a megathrust earthquake of magnitude 9 or more.

"If I could go to Las Vegas and bet on it, I would say the next megathrust earthquake will be triggered by one of these ETS events," said Melbourne, who is reluctant to even visit Seattle during a silent quake.

Canada's Geological Survey issues an alert when the slip and tremors begin. The U.S. Geological Survey does not, because experts say the link is far too uncertain. The Canadians are reconsidering their policy after a 2007 notice led to blaring headlines and alarm.

"We don't want to cause panic," Dragert said. Megathrust earthquakes off the coast occur every 500 years or so, and the last one was in 1700. That means tremor and slip events most likely have been happening regularly for more than 300 years without setting off a disaster, Dragert said.

Sensor batteries

would'nt it be most efficient to use local college students and local emergency management teams to recharge and replace batteries as needed to keep sensors operating at maximumu capacity?

Gary Underwood

Port Angeles, Wa.

Gary Underwood of WA @ Aug 24, 2009 19:12:15 PM

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