Yellowstone
rattled by three ‘unusual’ earthquake swarms
24
September, 2013
September
24, 2013 – JACKSON,
Wyo. — Until
recently, Bob Smith had never witnessed two simultaneous earthquake
swarms in his 53 years of monitoring seismic activity in and around
the Yellowstone Caldera. Now, Smith, a University of Utah geophysics
professor, has seen three swarms at once. “It’s very remarkable,”
Smith said. “How does one swarm relate to another? Can one swarm
trigger another and vice versa?” Because concurrent swarms have
never been detected in the past, the answers aren’t in yet, Smith
said. The geophysicist said he “wouldn’t doubt” if at least two
of the events were related. Temblors from the three quake swarms
mostly hit in three areas: Lewis Lake, the Lower Geyser Basin and the
northwest part of Norris Geyser Basin. The largest earthquake shook
the ground near Old Faithful Geyser on Sept. 15. The epicenter of the
magnitude 3.6 quake, the largest in Yellowstone in about a year, was
just 6 miles to the north of Old Faithful. “Generally speaking it
needs to be 3.0 or higher for individuals to feel it,” Yellowstone
National Park spokesman Al Nash said. Yellowstone’s recent
earthquake swarms started on Sept. 10 and were shaking until about
11:30 a.m. Sept. 16. “A total of 130 earthquakes of magnitude 0.6
to 3.6 have occurred in these three areas, however, most have
occurred in the Lower Geyser Basin,” a University of Utah statement
said.
“Notably
much of seismicity in Yellowstone occurs as swarms.” Including
smaller events that have not been verified, there were many more
quakes, Smith said. The recent swarms produced roughly four quakes
that were large enough to feel. The first, a magnitude 3.5, struck
Sept. 13 about 17 miles northeast of West Yellowstone, Mont. Then, in
the early hours Sept. 15, two quakes, a magnitude 3.2 and magnitude
3.4, were detected in quick succession at 5:10 and 5:11 a.m., about
15 miles southeast of West Yellowstone. The magnitude 3.6 that marked
the peak of the swarm struck nearby about 4 1/2 hours later. “They
weren’t big earthquakes,” Smith said, “but they were felt.”
About half a dozen earthquakes are felt in Yellowstone in an average
year, he said. “This is pretty unusual, to be honest,” Smith
said. None of the recent quakes, Nash said, were strong enough to
cause damage or throw off the cycle of the Old Faithful geyser’s
eruptions. “We know that a significant enough earthquake in the
region has potential to alter geyser activity,” the spokesman said.
“A strong enough earthquake, like the one that occurred out at
Hebgen Lake in 1959, did change the interval of Old Faithful
eruptions.” That quake, a 7.3 to 7.5 on the Richter magnitude
scale, caused nearly 300 features on the Yellowstone landscape to
erupt, 160 of which had no previous record of geysers. Smith traced
the three recent earthquake swarms to the Hebgen Lake quake. “We
think that much of the seismicity is still aftershocks from that
event in 1959. It can go on for hundreds of years.”
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