Posted on 03/08/2010 10:34:38 AM PST by decimon
COLUMBUS, Ohio The massive magnitude 8.8 earthquake that struck the west coast of Chile last month moved the entire city of Concepcion at least 10 feet to the west, and shifted other parts of South America as far apart as the Falkland Islands and Fortaleza, Brazil.
These preliminary measurements, produced from data gathered by researchers from four universities and several agencies, including geophysicists on the ground in Chile, paint a much clearer picture of the power behind this temblor, believed to be the fifth-most-powerful since instruments have been available to measure seismic shifts.
Buenos Aires, the capital of Argentina and across the continent from the quakes epicenter, moved about 1 inch to the west. And Chiles capital, Santiago, moved about 11 inches to the west-southwest. The cities of Valparaiso and Mendoza, Argentina, northeast of Concepcion, also moved significantly.
The quakes epicenter was in a region of South America thats part of the so-called ring of fire, an area of major seismic stresses which encircles the Pacific Ocean. All along this line, the tectonic plates on which the continents move press against each other at fault zones.
The February Chilean quake occurred where the Nazca tectonic plate was squeezed under, or subducted, below the adjacent South American plate. Quakes routinely relieve pent-up geologic pressures in these convergence zones.
The research team deduced the cities movement by comparing precise GPS (global positioning satellite) locations known prior to the major quake to those almost 10 days later. The US Geological Survey reported that there have been dozens of aftershocks, many exceeding magnitude 6.0 or greater, since the initial event February 27.
Mike Bevis, professor of earth sciences at Ohio State University, has led a project since 1993 that has been measuring crustal motion and deformation in the Central and Southern Andes. The effort, called the Central and Southern Andes GPS Project, or CAP, hopes to perhaps triple its current network of 25 GPS stations spread across the region.
"By reoccupying the existing GPS stations, CAP can determine the displacements, or 'jumps', that occurred during the earthquake," Bevis said. By building new stations, the project can monitor the postseismic deformations that are expected to occur for many years, giving us new insights into the physics of the earthquake process.
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The Maule earthquake will arguably become one of the, if not the most important great earthquake yet studied. We now have modern, precise instruments to evaluate this event, and because the site abuts a continent, we will be able to obtain dense spatial sampling of the changes it caused. The event represents an unprecedented opportunity for scientists if certain observations are made with quickly and comprehensively.
Ben Brooks, an associate researcher with the School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology at the University of Hawaii and co-principal investigator on the project, said that the event, tragic as it was, offers a unique opportunity to better understand the seismic processes that control earthquakes.
The Maule earthquake will arguably become one of the, if not the most important great earthquake yet studied. We now have modern, precise instruments to evaluate this event, and because the site abuts a continent, we will be able to obtain dense spatial sampling of the changes it caused.
As such the event represents an unprecedented opportunity for the earth science community if certain observations are made with quickly and comprehensively, Brooks said.
Working with Bevis and Brooks on the project are Bob Smalley, the University of Memphis, who is leading field operations in Argentina; Dana Caccamise at Ohio State, who is lead engineer, and Eric Kendrick, also from Ohio State, who is with Bevis now in Chile making measurements in the field.
Along with Ohio State University and the University of Hawaii, scientists from the University of Memphis and the California Institute of Technology are participating in the project. Additionally the Instituto Geografica Militar, the Universidad de Concepcion and the Centro de Estudios Cientificos, all in Chile, also were partners.
In Argentina. the Instituto Geografica Militar, the Universidad Nacional de Cuyo in Mendoza and the Unversidad Nacional de Buenos Aires are collaborating in the work. UNAVCO, a consortium of more than 50 institutions and agencies involved in research in the geosciences, is providing equipment for the project.
The researchers have constructed a map showing the relative movement of locations after the Maule, Chile earthquake. Images showing that map are available at http://researchnews.osu.edu/archive/chilequakemap.htm.
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[EDITORS NOTE: Because principal investigator Mike Bevis is doing field work in Chile and communications with him are spotty, the University of Hawaiis Ben Brooks should be contacted for initial information.]
Contact: Ben Brooks (808) 228-8356; bbrooks@hawaii.edu Written by Earle Holland, (614) 292-8384; holland.8@osu.edu
Location ping.
This is amazing....earth moved 10 ft. at Concepcion? So if quake hit of this magnitude in CAlifornia could the same be expected?
That's Nothing!
Hawaii was moved nearly 5000 miles!
CNN Idiots
Click on the image or link above to see the video clip (6 seconds of stupidity thanks to Rick Sanchez and bimbo friend).
What the imbecile points at and confidently calls Hawaii is in fact the Galapagos Islands off the coast of South America - something every 3rd grader knows.
I be this screwed up some GPS maps.
Ping because you like earthquakes so much...
What’s the benchmark they are measuring against? The earth doesn’t have a coordinate grid inscribed on it.
Geodetic satellite (Of which GPS is really not a proper one) orbits are stable and predictable down to a few centimeters. I suspect they are referring everything to handful of reference observatories in the U.S., Europe and possibly Australia.
Since it moved the Falkland Islands, I wonder if Argentina stll wants ‘em?
I think they can still reach the oil, so yes.
Remember most likely those people are Darwinist and they dont even know what Island that is.
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This has to be . . .
has to be . . . uhhhh . . .
HAS to be . . . uhhhh . . . an urban legend.
That’s it.
No way Strategerist authorized such outrageous delusional poppy cock to be published.
Thos seismic instruments and all the related GPS measurements have clearly been imbibing far too much quantum mechanics swill. Someone needs to force them to go cold turkey off that stuff if any sensible science is to be recovered out of this mess.
/s
Excellent comment. You should get post of the day.
That’s amazing.
I wonder when islands move, if the base always moves or if sometimes only part of the seamount shifts.
Yes, but more importantly, how could somebody with a name like Bevis gain tenure from a State University since 1993? Surely the sophomoric joking never ends.
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