Unusual Indian Ocean earthquakes hint at tectonic breakup
April 2012 quakes occurred away from plate edges, suggesting formation of a new boundary.
A pair of massive earthquakes that rocked the Indian Ocean on 11 April 2012 may signal the latest step in the formation of a new plate boundary within Earth’s surface.Geological stresses rending the Indo-Australian plate apart are likely to have caused the magnitude-8.6 and magnitude-8.2 quakes, which broke along numerous faults and unleashed aftershocks for 6 days afterwards, according to three papers published online today in Nature1–3.Seismologists have suspected since the 1980s4that the Indo-Australian plate may be breaking up. But the 11 April earthquakes represent “the most spectacular example” of that process in action, says Matthias Delescluse, a geophysicist at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris and lead author of the first paper1. Worldwide, “it’s the clearest example of newly formed plate boundaries,” he says.According to prevailing theories of plate tectonics, the Indo-Australian plate began to deform internally about 10 million years ago. As the plate moved northwards, the region near India crunched against the Eurasian plate, thrusting the Himalayas up and slowing India down. Most scientists think that the Australian portion forged ahead, creating twisting tensions that are splitting the plate apart in the Indian Ocean.Delescluse and his team inferred the presence of these seismic stresses by modelling stress changes from shortly before the 2012 earthquakes. They found that two earlier earthquakes along the eastern plate boundary — the magnitude-9.1 tremor in 2004 that unleashed a massive tsunami across the Indian Ocean, and another quake in 2005 — probably triggered the 2012 event by adding to pent-up stresses in the plate’s middle region.Gregory Beroza, a seismologist at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, says that the model is a likely explanation. “The 2004 and 2005 earthquakes by themselves would not have caused this other earthquake. There had to be other stresses,” he says.
ExpandAt least four faults within the Indo-Australian plate ruptured simultaneously in April 2012, resulting in two magnitude-8 earthquakes within two hours. (Red stars indicate the epicentres.)KEITH KOPER, UNIVERSITY OF UTAH SEISMOGRAPH STATIONS
Read more at http://www.nature.com/news/unusual-indian-ocean-earthquakes-hint-at-tectonic-breakup-1.11487
Earth begins to break
Indo-Australian Tectonic Plate Is Breaking UpYou may not have felt it, but the whole world shuddered on 11 April, as Earth’s crust began the difficult process of breaking a tectonic plate. When two huge earthquakes ripped through the floor of the Indian Ocean, they triggered large aftershocks on faults the world over, and provided the best evidence yet that the vast Indo-Australian plate is being torn in two.Geologists have spent five months puzzling over the twin quakes - of magnitude 8.6 and 8.2 – which took place off the coast of North Sumatra. Events that large normally occur at the boundary between tectonic plates, where one chunk of Earth’s crust slides beneath another, but these were more than 100 kilometres from such a subduction zone. What’s more, both involved rocks grinding past each other sideways with very little vertical movement – what geologists call strike-slip earthquakes. Yet strike-slip quakes this large had never been reported before.
Taken together, the events suggest that the Indo-Australian plate is breaking up along a new plate boundary, say the researchers, and that may account for both the location and the size of April’s quakes . Although both are currently on the same plate, Australia is moving faster than India. This is causing a broad area in the centre of the Indo-Australian plate to buckle. As a result, the plate may be splitting (see map).
Mid-Ocean Ridge Earthquakes and Complex Plate Tectonics in a Quiet Week
OCTOBER 9, 2012 BY LEAVE A COMMENTEarthquakes of at least M5.0 for the week ending 9 October 2012 – Image courtesy of USGSThe 240 recorded earthquakes of at least magnitude 2.5 shown on the USGS real time earthquake map for the week 3-9 October showed the expected pattern with the majority of tremors (including all greater than or equal to M5.0) occurring along the boundaries of the earth’s tectonic plates, and a scattering of smaller events occurring within plates in more stable areas (including tremors of M3.0 in Oklahoma and M2.5 in eastern Canada).
Mid Ocean Ridge Earthquakes
The map shows a trio of tremors (two of M5.5 and one M5.7) occurring in the central Atlantic Ocean, along the ridge which forms the axis of the ocean where the African and American plates are moving apart and new ocean crust is being created. Such events, though by no means uncommon, are fewer in number and smaller in magnitude than those at transform or convergent plate boundaries.At ocean ridges, plate movement is largely extensional, although “all types of faulting styles are observed,” according to Bergman and Solomon’s 1984 article,Source mechanisms of earthquakes near mid-ocean ridges from body waveform inversion: Implications for the early evolution of oceanic lithosphere.Transform faults offset mid ocean ridges -Image courtesy of Pimvantend-Because the structure of ocean ridges includes fault segmentation, with each length of the ridge being offset by lateral (transform) faults, earthquakes are an expected feature of the process. Without detailed knowledge of the local tectonics of the three earthquakes it’s impossible to say exactly which type of faulting was responsible, although their location (a few kilometres from the ridge itself) suggests that they may have been generated by movement along these transform faults.Click to Read Page Two: Tectonics of the Indonesian Quake
No absolutes: How shifting plates completely remake the Earth
Tracking geologic hotspots shows a wobbly Earth in constant flux.
by John Timmer - Oct 5 2012, 10:10am MDTMaking the numbers add up
One of the larger successes of plate tectonics is that it offers an explanation for island chains. Groups of volcanic islands, like the Hawaiian islands, can trace straight lines for thousands of miles if one considers the largely submerged remains of former islands. Plate tectonics offers an explanation: there are stationary hot spots in the mantle that drive volcanic eruptions. The plates simply slide over a hot spot, which builds volcanoes that later become inactive and erode as they slide past.This process is so regular that it's one of the ways that scientists have tracked past plate motion. For the Hawaiian chain, it's even possible to see a sudden left turn, as the Pacific plate changed its direction of motion. These measurements tend to line up well with others based on measurements made at the boundary of plates.So, stationary hot spots, moving plates. That would make hot spots a great reference frame for plate movement. Just pick absolute locations for the hot spots, then you could track the entire planet's plates as they slid across them. Just one small problem: it doesn't work. "It was soon realized," the authors write, "that a reference frame defined by fixed hot spots from the Pacific Ocean could not adequately reproduce hot spot tracks in the Indian and Atlantic Ocean."In other words, although a hot spot appears to be a fixed reference frame for a given plate and its neighbors, our best data indicates that different hot spots appear to be moving relative to each other.But our best data is an ever-changing thing, and the authors decided it was time for another try. They went through the literature and pulled out any information they could find about rates and directions of plate motion, and integrated it all into a single model. Despite several iterations that made for a progressively better fit to the data from individual hotspots, there was no way to get things to work out globally. "Our attempts to define a global fixed hot spot reference frame have failed to produce acceptable fits to the segments of hot spot tracks formed from Late Cretaceous to Paleogene time (80–50 Ma [million years])," the authors concede.Their conclusion? It's time to give up on the idea of hot spots being fixed. If we're ever going to have an absolute reference frame, it's not going to come from hot spots.Shifting references on an unstable Earth
Based on the paper, though, it's hard to tell what else might provide an absolute reference. The authors' work provides further evidence that the entire surface of the Earth (the lithosphere) is moving relative to its interior, the mantle. In other words, the surface of the Earth is not completely coupled to the core, something that had previously been suggested to be the case for Saturn's moon Titan. In the case of Earth, the so-called "lithosphere rotation" involves a slow drift westward, shifting about a tenth of a degree every million years on average. However, the rate isn't even, and has been nearly three times that at some point in the past, apparently at the time when the Indian plate was accelerating toward Asia.It isn't just that we lack a fixed reference frame to track the plates. It's that plate tectonics itself shifts such enormous masses around that these skew the reference frame.As it turns out, this also wipes out another potential reference frame, the axis of the Earth's rotation. If the Earth were a uniform, solid sphere, its axis of rotation would remain stable. But the whole idea behind plate tectonics is that the mass isn't distributed evenly. The hot spots at issue here push to the surface of the crust precisely because they're hotter and thus less dense than the surrounding material. On larger scales, it's this density-driven convection that powers the shifting of the continents themselves. As crust is driven into the Earth's interior at subduction zones, it places sheets of solid material deep under the crust that take millions of years to come to equilibrium with their new surroundings.So, not only is the Earth not uniform, but its internal differences are constantly shifting around. All of which feeds back into the dynamics of its rotation, leading to a phenomenon called "true polar wander"—its axis of rotation hasn't always run through the sites of the current North and South Poles. In fact, during the period from 90 million to 40 million years ago, the poles drifted nearly 10 degrees and then snapped back.Technicalities and the big picture
The paper itself is long, dry, and very technical; it's not the sort of thing that I'd recommend anyone read unless they're actively working in this field. But the ideas within it are important and compelling.One important idea is that even our most successful scientific theories are filled with enough discrepancies and inconsistencies to keep scientists gainfully employed for generations. But it's important to keep these in perspective. Not knowing something, or even getting it wrong, doesn't mean that we don't know anything, or that every little inconsistency means we should throw the entire structure out.The story of plate tectonics itself highlights how oddities on their own aren't enough to overthrow a dominant idea. Instead, you have to come up with something that explains not only the discrepancies, but everything else that the dominant idea gets right. Even then, it's not easy, something that is very clear from the reception that plate tectonics got when it was first suggested almost precisely 100 years ago.One of the reasons that many people have a hard time accepting some aspects of science is that these ideas make them feel uncomfortable. Plate tectonics doesn't have the same emotional impact as the Copernican revolution, which told us that our place in the Universe wasn't special. But it does tell us that our place wasn't even a place for most of its history: continents shift, islands grow and vanish, and there are apparently no fixed frames of reference.Without the energy brought to the Earth's surface by plate tectonics, however, it's not even clear that life itself would have been able to flourish, and it certainly wouldn't have evolved the way it has without the changing climates and landscapes.Giving up a fixed frame of reference to have all that seems like a worthwhile tradeoff.read more at http://arstechnica.com/science/2012/10/no-absolutes-how-shifting-plates-completely-remake-the-earth/Intraplate quakes signal tectonic breakupBy Alexandra WitzeWeb edition: September 26, 2012Print edition: October 20, 2012; Vol.182 #8 (p. 5)A+ A- Text Size
Back Story | How the plates break up
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