A geologic
event known as diking can cause strong earthquakes -- with a magnitude
between 6 and 7, according to an international research team.
Diking can
occur all over the world but most often occurs in areas where the
Earth's tectonic plates are moving apart, such as Iceland, Hawaii and
parts of Africa in the East African Rift System. As plates spread apart,
magma from beneath the Earth's surface rises into the space, forming
vertical magma intrusions, known as dikes. The dike pushes on the
surrounding rocks, creating strain.
"Diking is a
known phenomenon, but it has not been observed by geophysical techniques
often," said Christelle Wauthier, assistant professor of geosciences,
Penn State who led the study. "We know it's linked with rift opening and
it has implications on plate tectonics. Here, we see that it also could
pose hazards to nearby communities."
The team
investigated ties between two natural disasters from 2002 in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, East African Rift System. On Jan. 17,
the Nyiragongo volcano erupted, killing more than 100 people and leaving
more than 100,000 people homeless. Eight months later a magnitude 6.2
earthquake struck the town of Kalehe, which is 12 miles from the
Nyiragongo volcano. Several people died during the Oct. 24 earthquake,
and Kalehe was inundated with water from nearby Lake Kivu.
"The Kalehe
earthquake was the largest recorded in the Lake Kivu area, and we wanted
to find out whether it was coincidence that, eight months before the
earthquake, Nyiragongo erupted," said Wauthier.
The researchers
used a remote sensing technique, Interferometric Synthetic Aperture
Radar, to measure changes to the Earth's surface before and after both
natural disasters.
"This technique
produces ground surface deformation maps. Then, you can invert those
deformation maps to find a source that could explain the observed
deformation. For the deformation observed in January 2002, we found that
the most likely explanation, or best-fitting model, was a 12-mile
diking intrusion in between Nyiragongo and Kalehe," said Wauthier.
The researchers
used the same technique for the October 2002 magnitude 6.2 earthquake,
analyzing seismicity in addition to ground-deformation changes. They
found that there was a fault on the border of the East African Rift
System that slipped, triggering the earthquake.
"We were able
to identify the type of fault that slipped, and we also had the
best-fitting model for the dike intrusion," said Wauthier. "Knowing both
of those, we performed a Coulomb stress-change analysis and found that
the January 2002 dike could have induced the October 2002 earthquake."
Coulomb
stress-change analysis is a modeling technique that calculates the
stress changes induced by a deformation source at potential receiver
faults throughout a region. If the Coulomb stress changes are positive,
it means that the source is bringing the receiver fault closer to
failure -- closer to slipping and generating an earthquake. This type of
analysis is regularly applied to assess whether an earthquake in one
region could trigger a secondary earthquake nearby.
The researchers
hypothesized that the dike opening pushed outward against the adjacent
rocks. These rocks became strained and passed stress to rocks adjacent
to them, accumulating stress on rocks on a fault in the Kalehe area. The
dike brought this fault closer to failure and, eight months later, a
small stress perturbation could have triggered the start of the
magnitude 6.2 earthquake.
"We've known
that every time magma flows through the Earth's crust, you create stress
and generate seismicity," said Wauthier. "But these are normally very
low magnitude earthquakes. This study suggests that a diking event has
the potential to lead to a large earthquake," said Wauthier.
The researchers report their findings in the current issue of Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems.
Collaborators
include Benoit Smets, European Center for Geodynamics and Seismology,
Vrije Universiteit Brussel and Royal Museum for Central Africa; and
Derek Keir, University of Southampton.
The National
Research Fund of Luxembourg, the Belgian Science Policy Office and the
U.K. Natural Environment Research Council supported this research.
http://www.geologyin.com/2016/02/new-cause-of-strong-earthquakes.html
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