Title: Volcanic Seismology and Deep Long Period Earthquakes
1Volcanic Seismology and Deep Long Period
Earthquakes
Wendy McCausland Graduate Research Assistant D
epartment of Earth and Space Sciences,
University of Washington Advisors Dr. Steve Mal
one - University of Washington/PNSN
Dr. Chris Newhall - University of
Washington/USGS
2Dr. Steve MaloneResearch Professor Department
of Earth and Space Sciences
- Research Interests
- Seismicity of the Cascade volcanoes
- Earthquake and volcanic hazards
- Strong-motion seismology
- Computer applications in seismic data acquisition
and network analysis
- Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN)
- http//www.ess.washington.edu/SEIS/PNSN/
3Current Stations Pacific Northwest Seismograph
Network
- 138 Short-period
- 15 others
- 21 Broad-band
- 9 others
- 69 Strong-motion
- 35 NSMP sites
4Dr. Chris NewhallAffiliate Professor, Dept of
Earth and Space SciencesResearch Scientist,
U.S.G.S.
- Leader of the World Organization of Volcano
Observatories (WOVO)
http//www.wovo.org
- Member of the USGS' Volcano Disaster Assistance
Team
- Recent work focuses on
- Processes of volcanic unrest (seismicity, ground
deformation, gas emission, etc)
- Applications of this research to eruption
forecasting
- Developing a web-accessible database of volcanic
unrest, linked to the Smithsonian database of
historical volcanic eruptions WOVOdat
http//www.wovo.org/wovodat.htm - Helps colleagues from the Cascades Volcano
Observatory (CVO) and a number of countries
during volcanic crises
5Recent Seismic and Volcanic Activity near Goma,
Democratic Republic of the Congo
6Graduate Students
- Studies of particularly puzzling or previously
unrecognized patterns of unrest,
- Sarah Albano - groundwater response to volcanic
strain
- Wendy McCausland - unusual volcanic seismicity,
DLP events
- Jeff Witter - circulation of magma in volcanic
conduits as a mechanism for non-explosive
volatile emission at passively degassing
volcanoes, excess SO2 degassing - Josh Jones seismicity of Oldoinyo Lengai, Mount
Hood
- Adam Haulter Avalanche events at Mount Rainier
- Thesis study of ephemeral processes
- Cami Apfelbeck - chemical and thermal evolution
of the new caldera lake at Pinatubo
- Shannon Hayes - world-record-setting sediment
transport from Pinatubo's pyroclastic deposits
7What is Volcanic Seismology?
- Study of
- Earthquakes
- At or near volcano (
- Generated by volcanic processes
- Velocity structure of the volcano
- Seismic attenuation at the volcano
8Volcanic Seismicity Why Study?
- To understand
- Dynamics of active volcanic systems
- Physical properties of bubbly magma
- Map the extent and evolution of source regions
- Stress conditions, both regional and local
- Ultimately leads to better
- Forecasting of eruptive behavior
- Assessment of volcanic hazards
9Volcanic Seismicity Why Different from
Tectonic?
- Seismicity that
- precedes,
- accompanies, and
- follows volcanic eruptions, intrusions
Number of earthquakes higher than in normal
crust- hot fluids and low rock strengths lead to
many small often unfelt earthquakes
Shallower depths (1-9 km) than tectonic
Occurrence pattern swarms vs mainshock-aftershock
sequences
Different types associated with different
processes high frequency, low frequency, explosio
ns, tremor
Non-Uniform stress field leads to complex Focal
Mechanisms including volumetric components in
addition to simple shear
10Volcanic Earthquake Types
- High frequency events
- (volcano- tectonic) - A
- Low frequency or Long
- period events - C, F, I, J
- Hybrid events -B
- Explosion quakes -E
- Volcanic tremor D, G, H
- Avalanche events
(From McNutt, 2000)
11Recent Eruptive History of Cascade Volcanoes
Young Cascades Volcanoes
Monitored Cascades Volcanoes
12Relative Seismicity at Cascade Volcanoes
13Seismicity in the Cascades Region1990-2001
M0.5
14Deep Long Period Earthquakes
- Deep ? 10 - 35 km depth
- Long Period ? 1 s
- Importance
- source not well understood
- attributed to migration of magmatic fluids
- eruption triggering at silicic centers-
- Ex. Pinatubo, 1991 (White, 1996)
-
15Deep Long Period Earthquakes
- Examples in Washington/Oregon Cascades
- Mt. Rainier
- Mt. Baker
- Mt. St. Helens
- In California (Pitt et al, 2002)
- Mammoth Mountain- Devils Postpile
- Mono Craters
- Sierra Nevada (south of Yosemite, west of
Mammoth)
- Lassen Peak
- Mt. Shasta - Medicine Lake
- Clear Lake
- In Japan
- Fuji
- Izu Oshima
16Deep Long Period Seismicity and Volcano Locations
Deep Long Period Seismicity and Volcano Location
s
Non- low frequency earthquakes
DLPs
Volcano
17Mount Hood
18Mt Hood Earthquakes
19Mount St. Helens
20Mt St Helens Seismicity
21Mt St Helens Relocations
Mount St. Helens
447 events from 1998 swarm
22Mt St Helens Stress Model
Mount St. Helens
Major compressive axes
23Mount St. Helens - 2 decades
24Current Seismicity atMount St. Helens
25Deep LPs Mt St Helens
Z 27 km
26Mount Rainier
27Mt Rainier Seismicity
28Mt. Rainier Velocity Tomography
29Mt Rainier DLP Events
30Mt Rainier DLP Earthquakes
Depth 10 13 km Spatially distinct from Volca
no-tectonic (VT) events Similar depth to deepes
t VT events Reflect injection of basaltic magma
into system? Result from Resonance of flui
d-filled crack? Unsteady non-linear flow in irre
gular conduit? Another yet unknown mechanism?
31Mt Rainier DLPsFiltered for Low and High
Frequencies
32Mt Rainier Comparing a Long Period with a High
Frequency Event
33Focal Mechanisms for VT events and locations of
DLPs
Focal Mechanisms for Events in 3 Different Dep
th
Ranges and Deep LP Locations
34Comparison of spectral content of DLP vs VTs at
2 stations
Red is DLP Blue is VT
35Spectrogram for High Frequency and Low Frequency
Events Station FMW
36In Summary
- Volcanic earthquakes are key to underlying
processes and forecasting
- Deep Long Period Earthquakes
- Occur at many volcanoes in the Cascades,
including Mount Rainier and Mount St. Helens
- Related to magma but exact mechanisms unknown
- Extent and number unknown in Cascades, because
this is just a sample of triggered events
- Also occur at Japanese volcanoes, including Fuji,
Izu Oshima, and others
- I am interested to compare DLP events in the
Cascades and Japan