Japanese researchers have revealed a relationship between helium levels in groundwater and the amount of stress exerted on inner rock layers of the earth, found at locations near the epicenter of the 2016 Kumamoto earthquake. Scientists hope the finding will lead to the development of a monitoring system that catches stress changes that could foreshadow a big earthquake.
Several studies, including some on the massive earthquake in Kobe, Japan, in 1995, have indicated that changes to the chemical makeup of groundwater may occur prior to earthquakes. However, researchers still needed to accumulate evidence to link the occurrence of earthquakes to such chemical changes before establishing a strong correlation between the two.
A team of researchers at the University of Tokyo and their collaborators
found that when stress exerted on the earth's crust was high, the levels of a
helium isotope, helium-4, released in the groundwater was also high at sites
near the epicenter of the 2016 Kumamoto earthquake, a magnitude 7.3 quake in southwestern Japan, which caused 50 fatalities
and serious damage.
The team used a submersible pump in deep wells to obtain groundwater
samples at depths of 280 to 1,300 meters from seven locations in the fault
zones surrounding the epicenter 11 days after the earthquake in April 2016.
They compared the changes of helium-4 levels from chemical analyses of these
samples with those from identical analyses performed in 2010.
Locations with high levels of stress exertion exhibited high levels of
helium release, while locations with low levels of stress exertion exhibited
low levels of helium release, thereby demonstrating a positive correlation.
Credit: 2016 Yuji Sano.
"After careful analysis and calculations, we concluded that the levels
of helium-4 had increased in samples that were collected near the epicenter due
to the gas released by the rock fractures," says lead author Yuji Sano, a
professor at the University of Tokyo's Atmosphere Ocean Research Institute.
Furthermore, scientists estimated the amount of helium released by the
rocks through rock fracture experiments in the laboratory using rock samples
that were collected from around the earthquake region. They also calculated the
amount of strain exerted at the sites for groundwater sample collection using
satellite data. Combined, the researchers found a positive correlation between
helium amounts in groundwater and the
stress exertion, in which helium content was higher in areas near the epicenter, while
concentrations fell further away from the most intense seismic activity.
"More studies should be conducted to verify our correlation in other
earthquake areas," says Sano. "It is important to make on-site
observations in studying earthquakes and other natural phenomena, as this
approach provided us with invaluable insight in investigating the Kumamoto
earthquake," he adds.
Scientists collect groundwater sample from a well in the Kumamoto
earthquake region. Credit: 2016 Yuji Sano
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