Scientists
document an episode in the breakup of the Indo-Australian plate into
two pieces, an epic process that began roughly 50 million years ago
and isn't done yet.
27
September, 2012
Planet
Earth may be 4.5 billion years old, but that doesn't mean it can't
serve up a shattering surprise now and again.
Such
was the case on April 11 when two massive earthquakes erupted beneath
the Indian Ocean off the coast of the Indonesian island of Sumatra,
far from the usual danger zones. Now scientists say the seafloor
ruptures are part of a long suspected, yet never before observed,
event: the slow-motion splitting of a vast tectonic plate.
The
first of the quakes, a magnitude 8.7, was 20 times more powerful than
California's long anticipated "big one" and tore a complex
network of faults deep in the ocean floor. The violence also
triggered unusually large aftershocks thousands of miles away,
including four off North America's western coast.
"It
was jaw-dropping," said Thorne Lay, a professor of Earth and
planetary sciences at UC Santa Cruz. "It was like nothing we'd
ever seen."
At
first, Lay wondered whether the computer code he used to analyze
earthquakes was wrong. Eventually, he and other scientists realized
that they had documented the breakup of the Indo-Australian plate
into two pieces, an epic process that began roughly 50 million years
ago and will continue for tens of millions more. Lay and other
scientists reported their findings online Wednesday in the journal
Nature.
Most
great earthquakes occur along plate borders, where one plate dives
beneath the adjoining plate and sinks deep into Earth's mantle, a
process called subduction. The April 11 quakes, however, occurred in
the middle of the plate and involved a number of strike-slip faults,
meaning the ground on one side of the fault moves horizontally past
ground on the other side.
Scientists
say the 8.7 main shock broke four faults. The quake lasted 2 minutes
and 40 seconds — most last just seconds — and was followed by a
second main shock, of magnitude 8.2, two hours later.
Unlike
the magnitude 9.1 temblor that struck in the same region on Dec. 26,
2004, and created a deadly tsunami, the April 11 quakes did not cause
similar destruction. That's because horizontally moving strike-slip
faults do not induce the massive, vertical displacement of water that
thrust faults do on the borders of plates.
The
type of interplate faults involved in the Sumatran quakes are the
result of monumental forces, some of which drove the land mass of
India into Asia millions of years ago and lifted the Himalayan
Mountains. As the Indo-Australian plate continues to slide northwest,
the western portion of the plate, where India is, has been grinding
against and underneath Asia. But the eastern portion of the plate,
which contains Australia, keeps on moving without the same
obstruction. That difference creates squeezing pressure in the area
where the quakes occurred.
The
study authors say that over time, as more quakes occur and new
ruptures appear, the cracks will eventually coalesce into a single
fissure.
"This
is part of the messy business of breaking up a plate," said
University of Utah seismologist Keith Koper, senior author of one of
the studies. "Most likely it will take thousands of similar
large quakes for that to happen."
The
quakes were also notable for triggering powerful aftershocks
thousands of miles away. Though major quakes have been known to
trigger aftershocks at great distance, they are usually less than 5.5
in magnitude. The April earthquakes triggered 11 aftershocks that
measured 5.5 or greater in the six days that followed, including a
magnitude 7. Remote shocks were felt 6,000 to 12,000 miles from the
main quakes.
Fred
Pollitz, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey in Menlo
Park, Calif., and lead author of one of the studies, said the quakes
were extremely effective in transmitting seismic wave radiation
around the world. Though Pollitz said the magnitude of the larger
Sumatran quake is No. 10 on the list of quakes since 1900, no other
temblor has triggered so many strong aftershocks so far away.
"It's
the most powerful earthquake ever in terms of capability of putting
stress on other fault zones around the world," he said.
Pollitz
said the quakes were likely to teach seismologists about the physics
of earthquakes, particularly those along strike-slip faults. That
knowledge, he said, would certainly apply to California's San Andreas
fault, which is also a strike-slip fault.
Lay
said that the Sumatran quakes were most surprising in that they were
completely unanticipated by seismologists and that he did not expect
the event to repeat any time soon.
Report
from Radio New Zealand
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