. Earth Science News .




.
TECTONICS
Purdue leads national earthquake program blanketing Indiana with seismic stations
by Staff Writers
West Lafayette IN (SPX) Oct 25, 2011

A group of students and researchers watch EarthScope Field Engineer Kenneth Oliver install a seismic station on Oct. 19 near Kentland, Ind. (Purdue University photo/Andrew Hancock)

Seismic equipment is being installed throughout Indiana as part of a national program to better understand how and why earthquakes and volcanic events occur, and Purdue University professors and students spent time last summer surveying the state to find the locations best suited for the equipment.

The study is part of EarthScope, a National Science Foundation program that includes more than 400 portable seismometers that record data used to measure earthquakes, monitor the behavior of seismic waves, map movement of the Earth's surface and create images of the North American continent's crust and mantle. These observations will contribute to a better understanding of seismic hazards throughout the nation.

The network of seismometers, called USArray, has been migrating eastward across the United States since 2005. Indiana is among the strip of states from Michigan to Florida where installations began this fall.

Robert Nowack, a Purdue professor of geophysics, said the data collected in Indiana could address significant uncertainties about the New Madrid and Wabash Valley fault zones.

"This will be the most comprehensive seismic deployment in the region ever performed and will give us a much better understanding of the earthquake potential in this state," he said. "The information gathered could help save lives and money by leading to more informed building and bridge designs."

Approximately 23 sites will be installed across the state that include seismic, GPS, and other geophysical instrumentation.

All of the Indiana stations are expected to be installed and operational by late spring of 2012. Each station will remain at a location for two years before it is moved to a new location at the eastern edge of the array. Nearly 2,000 locations across the nation will have been occupied when the project is completed.

Hersh Gilbert, a professor of geophysics who, along with Nowack, led the Purdue siting team in Indiana, said the resulting data will be used to form high-resolution images of the Earth's interior to better understand the geology and tectonics of North America and the structures along which earthquakes occur.

The equipment also will be used for weather research, he said. Barometers and ultrasound sensors also have been added to the equipment to increase the types of data collected and its potential uses.

"This equipment captures everything from an aircraft flying above, a sonic boom in the area to different weather environments, as well as vibrations from earthquakes in the Midwest and around the world," Gilbert said.

"Massive amounts of data are being recorded, and scientists in any discipline from locations around the world will have access to it to perform research."

This past summer Gilbert, Nowack, and undergraduate students in Purdue's Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Dane Dudley and Austin McGlannan performed reconnaissance to determine the best sites for seismic stations in Indiana and parts of northern Kentucky.

Dudley and McGlannan used geographic databases to identify optimal locations for seismic sensors. The team then visited the sites to inquire if landowners would be willing to host seismometers on their property and to verify that the locations were appropriate for a seismic station.

It is important that a site be free of local seismic noise, such as nearby rivers and road traffic, or exposure to too much wind, that can reduce the quality of the data recorded.

Each site also needs to have a strong wireless phone signal so that the seismic instrument can transmit data with good fidelity, Gilbert said.

At each location, a seismometer that measures north-south, east-west, and vertical movement is buried in a vault about six feet below the surface. Solar panels mounted on an eight-foot pole provide power.

Data is recorded continuously and is relayed in real-time via cell phone modems to the USArray operations center in California.

A permanent seismic station was previously set up on Purdue Research Foundation property about seven miles west of the West Lafayette campus. The station is part of a permanent backbone network of seismic stations that will provide a long-term data reference for comparison of observations made by the USArray.

Visualizations from the USArray network

Related Links
Purdue University
Tectonic Science and News




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



TECTONICS
Turkey, a country at seismic crossroads
Paris (AFP) Oct 24, 2011
The 7.2-magnitude earthquake that struck Van province in eastern Turkey on Sunday, causing hundreds of fatalities, underscores the country's fate to be straddling one of the world's most active seismic zones. Turkey is squeezed between two tectonic plates - Eurasia to the north and Africa/Arabia to the south - that are grinding into each other, according France's Paris Institute of the Phy ... read more


TECTONICS
Rice regrets shoe shopping amid Katrina disaster: book

Radiation hotspot near Tokyo linked to Fukushima: officials

Use Japan nuke disaster to reform mental health system: WHO

Wall collapses at Pompei after flash storms

TECTONICS
News popular on tablets but few want to pay: study

Microring device could aid in future optical technologies

Wearable depth-sensing projection system makes any surface capable of multitouch interaction

Netflix loses 810,000 US subscribers

TECTONICS
China the culprit of potential water wars?

Run-off, emissions deliver double whammy to coastal marine creatures

Jet packs rule, say deep-sea astronauts

Brazil pulls out of OAS meet over Amazon dam dispute

TECTONICS
China's glaciers in meltdown mode: study

Extreme Melting on Greenland Ice Sheet

Glaciers in China shrinking with warming

Polar bear habitats expected to shrink dramatically:

TECTONICS
Putting light-harvesters on the spot

Breakthrough in the production of flood-tolerant crops

How plants sense low oxygen levels to survive flooding

Stem Rust-resistant Wheat Landraces Identified

TECTONICS
Fiery volcano offers geologic glimpse into land that time forgot

Bangkok set for unstoppable floodwaters

Hurricane Rina strengthens, takes aim at Cancun

Turkey's ethnic tension boils over in quake-hit city

TECTONICS
France denies Somali bombardment, admits helping Kenya

US troops to advise front-line units on Uganda rebels

Sudden drop in Somali arrivals in Kenya: UNHCR

Kenya, Uganda snared in Battle for Africa

TECTONICS
Tracing the first North American hunters

Culture in humans and apes has the same evolutionary roots

Crowded Earth: how many is too many

'Generation Squeezed': today's family staggering under the pressure


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement