Skip to main content

Secondary menu

User menu

  • Join
  • OR
  • Log In

MNN - Mother Nature Network

Tuesday, May 21, 2013
SPECIAL FEATURES:
  • Leaderboard
  • Nest
  • TreeHugger
  • Photos
  • Blogs
  • SB 2013
  • Joy of Less

Search form

Social links

Main menu

  • Earth Matters
    • Browse all »
    • Animals
    • Weather
    • Energy
    • Politics
    • Space
    • Translating Uncle Sam
    • Wilderness & Resources
  • Health
    • Browse all »
    • Allergies
    • Fitness & Well-Being
    • Healthy Spaces
  • Lifestyle
    • Browse all »
    • Arts & Culture
    • Travel
    • Natural Beauty & Fashion
    • Recycling
    • Responsible Living
  • Green Tech
    • Browse all »
    • Computers
    • Gadgets & Electronics
    • Research & Innovations
    • Transportation
  • Eco-Biz & Money
    • Browse all »
    • Green Workplace
    • Personal Finance
    • Sustainable Business Practices
  • Food & Drink
    • Browse all »
    • Beverages
    • Healthy Eating
    • Recipes
  • Your Home
    • Browse all »
    • At Home
    • Organic Farming & Gardening
    • Remodeling & Design
  • Family
    • Browse all »
    • Babies & Pregnancy
    • Family Activities
    • Pets
    • Protection & Safety

Breadcrumb Navigation

MNN.COM › Earth Matters › Wilderness & Resources
    x
  • Tweet
  • Email
  • Bookmark and ShareShare
  • Earn Points
    What's this?
What role do mountains in the sea play in earthquakes on land?
New technology is allowing researchers better insight into what happens when a seafloor mountain crashes into and under a continental plate.

By

Andrea Mustain, OurAmazingPlanet
Mon, Feb 27 2012 at 1:41 PM

Related Topics:

Oceans, Earthquake News
Costa Rica seamounts

CATCH MY DRIFT: A spot off the coast of Costa Rica where two seamounts (at the edge of the frame) are heading for the continental plate. (Photo: Roland von Huene, W. Weinrebe)

What happens when inexorable geological forces shove a giant seafloor mountain beneath a continent? This is not the improbable premise of a bad eco-disaster movie, but a serious area of inquiry — and a question with few clear-cut answers, scientists say.
 
However, new technology is allowing researchers improved glimpses of what happens when a seafloor mountain crashes into and under a continental plate, and what role the slow-motion collision plays in earthquakes.
 
These collisions occur out of sight, along subduction zones, where oceanic plates subduct, or dive under, overlying continental plates. As the oceanic plate goes, so goes the mountain that sits atop it, slowly burrowing into the side of the continental plate, and then deeper and deeper beneath it.
 
Tunneling mountains
Yet these subduction zones aren't always slow movers. When the oceanic plate suddenly slips, it generates an earthquake — sometimes a massive one, such as last year's devastating Tohoku earthquake in Japan.
 
Some research has cast seafloor mountains (called seamounts) as heroes, suggesting the peaks are capable of halting a subduction earthquake in its tracks.
 
"To get a super-big quake you need to break a large portion of the plate boundary in one shot, and subducting seamounts may segment the plane in big earthquakes — so it doesn't all go at once," said Anne Trehu, a geophysicist at Oregon State University.
 
Yet new research suggests these burrowing mountains can also play the villain.
 
"They could form a barrier to a giant earthquake — and they could also easily trigger a giant earthquake," said Roland von Huene, a veteran geophysicist who has studied subducting seamounts for more than 30 years.
 
Good mountain, bad mountain
New research has tied a spate of earthquakes in Oregon to a tunneling seamount scientists estimate is about 16,000 feet (5,000 meters) high — taller than the Alps.
 
Dubbed M2, the buried seamount lies about 19 miles (30 kilometers) off the Oregon coastline. Over millennia, the mountain has tunneled about 28 miles (45 km) eastward into the North American plate, and is buried beneath about 7 miles (12 km) of rock. [Infographic: Tallest Mountain to Deepest Ocean Trench]
 
The mountain is likely behind a magnitude 4.8 earthquake in 2004, which was felt on land, along with a series of smaller quakes. So why is it acting up now?
 
It's likely because the mountain is now facing much harder rocks in the overlying continental plate than it has yet encountered, said Trehu, who led research on the quakes published in the Dec. 16 issue of the journal Geology.
 
"You have seismicity concentrated there because you have a seamount hitting up against crystalline rocks," Trehu said — which are far harder than the sedimentary rocks the mountain plowed through on the first leg of its subterranean journey.
 
However, Trehu cautioned, that is simply an interpretation of compelling data, and the idea is controversial. "Some people argue it's just chance that you have earthquakes there now," she said.
 
Nearby menace
The Cascadia subduction zone, where the seamount is subducting, stretches from Vancouver to northern California, and has produced colossal earthquakes in the past. In 1700, the subduction zone unleashed a powerful earthquake, likely a magnitude 9.0, which sent a damaging tsunami ashore in Japan.
 
And although the Cascadia hasn't produced a massive earthquake in more than 300 years, it will undoubtedly do so again. There's just no telling when or why, Trehu said.
 
It's not at all clear what relationship the small earthquakes likely produced by the burrowing seamounts would have to a massive, dangerous quake, Trehu said.
 
However, she said, technology that allows for better imaging of the buried mountains, and the reams of data gathered on the devastating subduction quakes that struck in Chile in 2010 and in Japan in 2011 are helping scientists develop better theories about what role seafloor topography plays in earthquakes.
 
"We're looking for causative relationships between structure and slip," she said. "So we're using the lessons from Japan and Chile to better anticipate what could happen here."
 
Reach Andrea Mustain at amustain@techmedianetwork.com. Follow her on Twitter @AndreaMustain.Follow OurAmazingPlanet for the latest in Earth science and exploration news on Twitter @OAPlanetand on Facebook.
 
Related on OurAmazingPlanet:

 

  • 7 Ways the Earth Changes in the Blink of an Eye
  • Image Gallery: This Millennium's Destructive Earthquakes
  • The 10 Biggest Earthquakes in History
 
Copyright 2012 OurAmazingPlanet, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. 

You might also like:

Join the conversation

Comment: 1
Sign in with one of these accounts to add your comment.
Log in or
create an account
  • Sign in using this account:
anonymous
Kea Giles Feb 28 2012 at 1:17 PM

The Geology article referenced in this article was published online on 16 December but is in the February print issue: http://geology.gsapubs.org/content/40/2/103.abstract?sid=10299b0f-dd75-4...

|
  • Log in or register to post comments
  • Report This Post 

EDITORS' PICKS

tease AnoNuevo

line

tease cars

line

tease fitness story

Advertisement

TODAY'S MOST POPULAR ON

  1. Man tattoos puppy, faces backlash
  2. Olive oil and nuts make you smarter, study finds
  3. 13 natural remedies for the ant invasion
  4. The mystery of Devil's Kettle Falls
  5. Tornado survivor finds dog during live TV interview
  6. The squirrel that wears many hats
  7. 'Gay' dog rescued from Tenn. animal shelter
  8. 7 ways to ensure you sleep more soundly
  9. The 8 happiest dogs on YouTube
  10. What causes tornadoes?
+ Add this to my site

Advertisement

NEWSLETTER

Mother Nature. Delivered
Advertisement
Advertisement

Footer menu

  • Quick Links
    • Joy of Less
    • About Us
    • Advisory Board
    • Editors' Blog
    • Press
    • Privacy
    • Sitemap
    • Terms of Service
  • MNN Tools
    • Advice
    • Blogs
    • Day in History
    • Eco-glossary
    • Infographics
    • Lists
    • Photos
    • Videos
  • Connect
    • The Nest
    • Contact Us
    • Mixed Greens
    • Newsletters
    • RSS
    • Social
    • TreeHugger
    • Mobile
  • Channels
    • Earth Matters
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Green Tech
    • Eco-Biz & Money
    • Your Home
    • Family
    • State Reports
  • Follow MNN
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Tumblr
    • Google+
    • StumbleUpon

Copyright © 2013 MNN Holdings, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Website by GLICK INTERACTIVE | Powered by CIRRACORE

SPONSORS