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The silent type: Pacific Northwest hit routinely by nonquakes.


Once every 14 months or so, portions of coastal British Columbia and northwestern Washington State experience a slow ground motion that, if released all at once, would generate an earthquake measuring more than 6 on the Richter scale.

That's what data from a network of Global Positioning System Global Positioning System: see navigation satellite.
Global Positioning System (GPS)

Precise satellite-based navigation and location system originally developed for U.S. military use.
 (GPS) equipment spanning the region show, say scientists who presented their findings at last week's annual meeting of the Seismological seis·mol·o·gy  
n.
The geophysical science of earthquakes and the mechanical properties of the earth.



seis
 Society of America, held this year in Victoria, British Columbia.

Scientists discovered the region's so-called silent earthquakes when they analyzed data from the summer of 1999 (SN: 5/12/01, p.301). GPS stations in the area, which lies at the western edge of the North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 tectonic plate, typically move northeast at about 8 millimeters--less than a finger's width--per year, says Herb Dragert of the Geological Survey of Canada in Sidney, British Columbia Sidney is a town located at the northern end of the Saanich Peninsula, on Vancouver Island in the Canadian province of British Columbia. It has a population of approximately 11,300. . But for 6 to 15 days in August and SePtember 1999, each of seven GPS sites backtracked toward the Pacific before resuming its slow creep inland.

Now, analysis of 10 years of GPS data suggests that this event was just one of a series of silent earthquakes, a type of motion that hasn't been observed else-where in the absence of a major temblor. The four most recent episodes began in July 1998, August 1999, December 2000, and February 2002. The ground motion occurred along a boomerang-shaped arc above the Cascadia subduction zone The Cascadia subduction zone is a very long sloping fault that stretches from northern Vancouver Island to northern California. Geography
The zone separates the Juan de Fuca, Explorer, Gorda and the North American Plate.
, where the offshore Juan de Fuca Juan de Fu·ca   , Strait of

A strait between northwest Washington State and Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada, linking Puget Sound and the Strait of Georgia with the Pacific Ocean.
 tectonic plate dives beneath the North American plate The North American Plate is a tectonic plate covering most of North America, extending eastward to the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and westward to the Cherskiy Range in East Siberia. .

The 1998 event was larger than any since then, says Dragert. In that silent quake, a 60-kilometer-by-300-km area about 30 km or more beneath Vancouver Island and Puget Sound slipped about 30 mm over a period of 12 days or so. If that slippage had happened all at once, seismic instruments would have measured a magnitude-6.8 quake. As it was, there was no detectable vibration, making the slide invisible to seismometers.

The driving force for the silent quakes is the convergence of tectonic plates along the Cascadia zone. The shallow sections of that zone, which let loose and produce major earthquakes once every 5 centuries or so, are currently locked, says Dragert. Scientists don't fully understand how stresses accumulate along the deeper portions, where the silent earthquakes seem to occur.

The silent quakes that scientists have identified so far have been spaced, on average, 440 days apart, says William Q. Sumner, a geophysicist at Central Washington University Central Washington University, or CWU, is an accredited four-year educational institution located in Ellensburg, Washington in the United States. The university originally opened in the late 19th century as a teacher's college, which is still one of the primary majors taken there.  in Ellensburg. There's no way to tell if the recent episodes are representative of the region's long-term seismic behavior. "We've analyzed only about 10 years of data from processes that play out over hundreds of years," says Sumner.
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Article Details
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Author:Perkins, S.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1U9WA
Date:Apr 27, 2002
Words:444
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