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UC seismologists dig deep to profile ‘mini-quakes’
By Diane Ainsworth, Public Affairs
23 October 2002
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In Parkfield, Calif., a team of Berkeley seismologists has begun studying earthquakes deep beneath the ground to understand the great tectonic compression that is carrying an 800-mile sliver of California northward at an average rate of 1.5 inches each year —and producing catastrophic earthquakes at greater, far more alarming intervals. Building on 15 years of earthquake research at Parkfield, which straddles the San Andreas Fault about 200 miles south of San Francisco, Berkeley earthquake expert Robert Nadeau says a new experimental earthquake station will help seismologists understand the mechanics and frequency of small quakes, those measuring 2.0 or less on the Richter scale. That will give them a better snapshot of how fast the fault is slipping. “A picture of the small quakes occurring along this part of the fault can tell us where and how much the fault is moving,” says Nadeau, an assistant researcher in Berkeley’s Seismology Laboratory. “Studying them at depth will give us a better understanding of how the fault behaves, what types of rock are down there, and how the release of groundwater and other fluids may be altering or weakening the fault.” An ideal location “We really need to understand what is happening on and near a fault during an earthquake,” Romanowicz says. “Most of what we know today is based on assumptions rather than actual direct measurements.” Piercing the heart of the fault Last year, that network was expanded to 13 stations to support a new underground earthquake observatory, the deepest ever planned. The San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth (SAFOD), to be funded by the National Science Foundation, will pierce the heart of the San Andreas Fault, extending 2 kilometers (1.25 miles) straight down, then continuing at an angle across the entire fault zone until it reaches relatively undisturbed rock on the east side of the fault, at a depth of approximately 4 kilometers (2.5 miles) It will be the first borehole to cross two plates and record shifts in the layers of rock where the quakes originate. Nadeau says a pilot station extending about half that depth — 2.2 kilometers (1.4 miles) below the surface — is a precursor to the deeper underground SAFOD station. That experimental station is up and running now, and beginning to record the many mini-earthquakes of 2.0 magnitude or less that occur repeatedly along the Parkfield segment of the San Andreas. “Instruments are recording the velocity of seismic waves that are produced during a quake,” he says. “Because seismic waves travel at different speeds through different types of rock, scientists will be able to determine what type of rock is present at those depths.” Changes in the ground Instruments provided by other institutions will begin recording other pieces of the puzzle — such as subsurface ground temperatures and changes in groundwater levels that occur in the aftermath of a quake — so that seismologists can determine how much stress has been relieved along specific parts of the fault. That, in turn, will allow them to look for other parts of the fault that haven’t been shaken for a while — and to better predict whether those regions are likely to rupture anytime soon. “The new SAFOD observatory will be our opportunity to punch through a seismically active fault zone and take direct measurements,” Nadeau says. “It will give us a chance to explore earthquake initiation, and what happens to the ground at great depths when energy is released. All of this will contribute to a fundamental understanding of earthquakes, and enhance our ability to identify hazardous parts of the fault in the future.”
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