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Seismic noise can yield maps of Earth's crust.


One way in which researchers can garner clues about Earth's inner structure is to analyze intense ground motions from earthquakes or test explosions. Now, scientists are realizing that the small, random, and nearly constant seismic waves that travel in all directions through Earth's crust also carry useful information.

Any seismic waves that travel between one point and another provide information about the intervening rocks, says Peter Gerstoft of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography Scripps Institution of Oceanography: see California, Univ. of.  in La Jolla La Jolla (lə hoi`yə), on the Pacific Ocean, S Calif., an uninc. district within the confines of San Diego; founded 1869. The beautiful ocean beaches, in particular La Jolla shores and Black's Beach, and sea-washed caves attract visitors and , Calif. To prove that point, he and his colleagues looked at data on the minuscule ground motions in the 50-millihertz to 400-mHz frequency range that had been gathered by a 148-instrument network of seismometers in southern California Southern California, also colloquially known as SoCal, is the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. Centered on the cities of Los Angeles and San Diego, Southern California is home to nearly 24 million people and is the nation's second most populated region, . Most of those vibrations were probably caused by the motion of tides and pounding.

In the first step of their analysis, the researchers added up the ground motions that each seismometer seis·mom·e·ter  
n.
A detecting device that receives seismic impulses.



seismo·met
 collected over the course of a month, thereby converting the seismic noise into signals that were large enough to analyze. Then, the researchers used a mathematical technique to isolate the seismic waves that traveled directly between any two particular seismometers. By repeating this second step for each of the more than 10,000 paths linking the 148 seismometers, the scientists assembled an ultrasoundlike image of Earth's crust in the region.

The image clearly distinguishes between broad, sediment-rich areas where the seismic waves traveled at slower-than-average speeds, such as the Los Angeles Basin The Los Angeles Basin is the coastal sediment-filled plain located between the peninsular and transverse ranges in southern California in the United States containing the central part of the city of Los Angeles as well as its southern and southeastern suburbs (both in Los Angeles , and rockier regions, such as mountains, where the waves traveled more quickly. The San Andreas fault San Andreas fault, great fracture (see fault) of the earth's crust in California. It is the principal fault of an intricate network of faults extending more than 600 mi (965 km) from NW California to the Gulf of California.  shows up plainly because porous sedimentary rocks (Geol.) See Aqueous rocks, under Aqueous.

See also: Sedimentary
 lie on one side of that rupture and dense rocks lie on the other.

The new technique should enable geologists to collect data more cheaply and efficiently because they won't have to set off series of explosions or wait for a large earthquake to provide seismic signals, says Gerstoft.--S.P.
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Title Annotation:SEISMOLOGY
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 11, 2005
Words:310
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