Caribbean Earthquake Model
December 22, 2006Researchers at the University of Arkansas and Purdue University have monitored tiny tectonic movements in the Caribbean to create the first comprehensive and quantitative kinematic model describing potential earthquake activity in the region.
University of Arkansas researchers Pamela Jansma and Glen Mattioli, together with Purdue University researchers D. Manaker and Eric Calais, presented their findings at the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union.
Several large earthquakes have struck the Caribbean region in the past 500 years in the vicinity of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and the island of Hispaniola, shared by Haiti and the Dominican Republic. Millions of residents live in the Caribbean Islands, so a better understanding of the likely location of earthquakes could help people better prepare for the possibility.
For the past 12 years, Jansma and Mattioli have used global positioning satellite geodesy to monitor very small movements along the tectonic plates in the Caribbean basin to determine the relative motion between the Caribbean and the North American plates. Caribbean plate boundaries are interesting because the plates move extremely slowly - about 2 centimeters a year - making the region an important part of the global picture of how plates interact.
"We have to wait a long time to see results with the GPS," Jansma said.
After 12 years of gathering data, the researchers felt they had enough information to build a preliminary model. In doing so, they try to build a model that explains the movement along the plate interface to see if there is sticking going on between the two plates.
"If the plates are stuck and not moving past each other smoothly, at some time they will break, and if they break, it will release a lot of energy" in the form of an earthquake, Mattioli said.
The model contains data on the slip rates of the main faults and strain accumulation at various sites, based both on GPS sites and geological evidence. It also includes information on the locked zone of the faults - the depth on the fault that is partially stuck-- and the location of known fault boundaries.
The researchers found that coupling, or sticking, was low in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, but was much higher in the Dominican Republic, Haiti and Hispaniola, which implies an elevated risk of earthquakes in that region.
"This result isn't surprising if you look at the geomorphology of the region," Jansma said. The Dominican Republic is more mountainous than Puerto Rico, implying more deformation.
The next step will be to refine the model using more data gathered from the region over time.
"Regional models like these show you where the important data holes are. They make predictions about where you should put additional sites," Jansma said.
The next version of the model will include new data collected in 2006 and 2007 and should be better still.
Source: University of Arkansas
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