From Deseret News archives:

Mystery of fault slips may have been solved

Published: Sunday, Aug. 20, 2006 10:31 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Lowry focused much of his work on the Mexican events. "Down in southern Mexico we find that these things happen, very regularly, around January-February," he said.

One idea is that it's triggered by a yearly shift in the weight of the oceans, caused by climate fluctuations and called the "pole tide." That has a period similar to the Puget Sound changes, but not to the other patterns.

Changes in the weight of the atmosphere or water puts stress on the earth. This force can shift because of yearly patterns like the pole tide, or seasonal changes in rain or snowfall.

In southern Mexico, the ground water rises and falls by half a yard over the year, because of rain and runoff. "Half a yard of water is about half a ton per square yard," he said.

"It's a lot of weight. It's a lot of mass that you're changing at the surface every year."

While this change seems massive, it's little when compared with the force generated by the sliding of seismic plates. It may be only 10 percent, or even just 1 percent, of the yearly energy of plate movement.

According to Lowry, the sheer weight of the seasonal variations isn't enough to cause silent earthquakes. Instead, that force is propagated down deep into the fault, to a place where the zone is sensitive to vibrations.

Story continues below
"Many physical systems have a frequency at which a tiny little change can cause a big response," he said.

Lowry mentioned the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, which infamously collapsed in 1940, because wind caused it to vibrate at just the wrong frequency. As the canyon winds jiggled it back and forth, it twisted and turned and flew apart.

Fault slips also have a resonance frequency. When water or atmospheric fluctuations cause the system to resonate, the result is a silent earthquake. The changes affect the faults at a particularly sensitive location.

Even though the changes may be small, Lowry added, "they're the right frequency to produce these resonances."

Resonance explains why the slow slips have a regularity, and difference in resonance from fault to fault shows why they don't all repeat in the same periods.


E-mail: bau@desnews.com

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image

Anthony R. Lowry

previousnext

Latest comments

In reading these comments I have determined that BYU fans have just about as...

USU home-court streak ends

BYU's record (broken by Wake Forest in January) was 16 games longer than...

You clearly do not understand, that even though you may have private...

"I'm not worried about your first amendment rights. But I sure wish you would...

There isn't a SINGLE principle of the gospel that's based in fear OR...

Kurt Bestor: Joy for the world

Get David Archuleta's new CD, Christmas From The Heart. Some of the...

USU home-court streak ends

usu lined the byu game up for 2 years...stew and the team lost focus after...

Y. profs: Beck not all-knowing

He does use videos, but he uses clips that are taken out of context. Or he...

And if you can't report the news, report the truthiness the utah armchair...

USU home-court streak ends

is classless. We lost to St Mary's granted they are not a traditional power...

Advertisements