PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

What can central Utah’s earthquake ‘swarms’ reveal about the West’s seismicity?

2023-07-25
(Press-News.org) Most of the earthquakes rumbling under the West’s Great Basin come in surges, clustered together in time and place. Scientists call these seismic groups “swarms,” which are a distinct category from the numerous aftershocks following a big shake, such as the 5.7 magnitude Magna quake of 2020 on the Wasatch Fault.

Rather than getting spread out evenly over time, many of these small, often imperceptible quakes strike a region in a short period of time, say a few days or weeks.

Central Utah has been the stage for dozens of earthquake swarms that have been recorded over the past 40 years by an ever-expanding network of seismic arrays managed by the University of Utah.

Now U seismologists are analyzing decades of seismic data in hopes of discerning the significance of these swarms in a geologically complex region known as a geothermal hotspot and for recent—geologically speaking—volcanism.

“In central Utah, seismic swarms are much more common than any other type of sequence. We looked into all types of sequences, but 80% of the sequences are swarms. That’s remarkable,” said Gesa Petersen, a post-doctoral research fellow. “We also saw that these are very heterogeneous. So one location in central Utah can have a very, very different behavior than other locations just 30, 40, 50 kilometers away.”

With U. geology professor Kristine Pankow, Petersen publish the latest findings July 13 in the journal Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems. Funding came from the state of Utah and the $220 million Department of Energy grant supporting the U’s geothermal research station known as Utah FORGE.

A geothermal hot spot

Located outside Milford, FORGE is within the research area that spans Beaver, Iron, Sevier and Paiute counties. The research area is home to three geothermal power-generating plants and includes the towns of Circleville, Beaver and Richfield.

The researchers suspect the earthquakes are triggered by hot water, powered by geothermal activity, coursing through fissures in Earth’s crust.

During the past 40 years, the U of U Seismograph Stations detected earthquake sequences featuring earthquakes of magnitude 1.5 or greater. But in further examining the data, Peterson and Pankow were able to identify hundreds of additional smaller earthquakes, as small as magnitude 0.5 recorded in 50 distinct sequences.

They concluded 40 qualified as swarms. Much can be learned from these smaller quakes, but they are hard to study, according to Pankow, who is the Seismograph Stations associate director.

 (BRT) and Cove Fort (CVT) Transverse Zones (P. D. Rowley, 1998), thin black lines indicate Quaternary faults. MP: Markagunt Plateau Volcanic Field. The larger map (c) shows seismicity in the study area since 1981, ML ≥ 2.5 (UUSS).

“We’re all worried about the Wasatch Front, but the other thing to know is we have earthquakes all over Utah,” said Pankow. “We recorded a certain level, but in some of these places there’s probably earthquakes happening all the time that we just don’t see. That’s something that’s really important to get an understanding of.”

Thousands of earthquakes

All told the research analyzed 2,300 earthquakes, most of which were between magnitude 1 and 3. The largest was a magnitude 5.1 that hit east of Richfield in 1989. That one was not part of a swarm, but rather was a mainshock followed by numerous aftershocks. The full catalog for the study area contains 20,000 events between 1981 and 2023, according to Petersen.

“However, we cannot exactly say how many of them are part of a sequence because we limit the study for sequences that have at least 20 earthquakes within 10 days. We do not look into smaller sequences because we need some minimum to look at statistical parameters and to compare characteristic patterns of the sequences,” she said. “However, in the 1980s and 1990s, the seismic network of Utah was not as dense as today. There were significantly less stations. Therefore we can only study larger sequences with larger magnitudes from these times. There were likely many more swarms or seismic sequences.”

The study greatly expanded on another recent study that focused exclusively on a swarm of hundreds of small quakes around Milford in the spring of 2021. That area had not experienced much earthquake activity during the entire 40-year window of seismograph data. Meanwhile, earthquakes have been happening as frequently as every few months in the nearby Mineral Mountains to the west during this same time period, Petersen said.

“So it’s a very heterogeneous system there,” she said. “You have a bunch of earthquakes in the same place and you can start learning about the structures that are activated in the place. If you have like only a single earthquake, you can’t learn that much then.”

The Mineral Mountains swarms were first detected a few years ago when new seismometers were installed for the FORGE geothermal research project.

“Before that we didn’t have the resolution, but now we can see there are events always coming, and it’s rapid,” Petersen said. “Within a couple of hours, you suddenly have 30, 40, 50 events and then it’s pausing again. You have this repeatedly, you have lots of activity. You can’t really feel it. It’s too small for that, but we can see it on the seismometers.”

The paper, titled “Small-Magnitude Seismic Swarms in Central Utah (US): Interactions of Regional Tectonics, Local Structures and Hydrothermal Systems,” can be found here.

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Encouraging Latinx youth to embrace ethnic pride can enhance their well-being

2023-07-25
Encouraging Latinx adolescents of Mexican origin to embrace their ethnic pride, cultural values, and connections to their cultural community contributes to positive development and better adjustment during adolescence, a new University of California, Davis, psychology study suggests. Moreover, researchers said, cultural preservation can help Latinx youth cope with adverse life experiences and social threats such as racism and discrimination. The study results were published this month in ...

Chapman University climate scientist finds new way to measure the Earth’s ability to offset carbon emissions

2023-07-25
A Chapman University scientist and his colleagues have determined how the Earth responds as it heats up due to climate change. The scientists say a warming world calls for a new approach in detecting how much carbon dioxide comes out of ecosystems when the temperature changes  — which tells us how well plants and soil can alleviate damage by removing carbon pollution from the atmosphere. The study is the first to find the temperature-carbon dioxide release relationship at the landscape level.  Their ...

Scientists discover new isopod species in the Florida Keys

Scientists discover new isopod species in the Florida Keys
2023-07-25
An international team of scientists from the University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric, and Earth Science and the Water Research Group from the Unit for Environmental Sciences and Management at the North-West University in South Africa have discovered a new species of marine cryptofauna in the Florida Keys. Cryptofauna are the tiny, hidden, organisms that make up the majority of biodiversity in the ocean. The roughly three-millimeter-long isopod is one of only 15 species from the genus Gnathia currently known in the region. The newly discovered species, Gnathia jimmybuffetti, which is a member of a group of crustaceans called gnathiid isopods, were collected ...

New drug delivery system shows promise in treatment of life-threatening pregnancy condition

New drug delivery system shows promise in treatment of life-threatening pregnancy condition
2023-07-25
PORTLAND, Ore. – Researchers in the Oregon State University College of Pharmacy have developed a drug delivery system that shows promise for greatly enhancing the efficacy of the medicine given to women with the life-threatening condition of ectopic pregnancy, which occurs when a fertilized egg implants somewhere other than the lining of the uterus. Olena Taratula of the OSU College of Pharmacy, and Maureen Baldwin and Leslie Myatt of Oregon Health & Science University led a team that used a mouse model to show ...

Experts call for independent inquiry into Canada’s COVID-19 response

2023-07-25
At first glance, Canada appears to have responded adequately to the covid-19 emergency, but beneath the surface lie major pandemic failures, warns a series of articles published by The BMJ today. The BMJ Canada Covid Series provides a critical analysis of what worked and what didn’t in Canada’s covid-19 response and calls for a national independent  review to learn lessons and ensure accountability for the past and future preparedness. The articles, written by leading clinicians and researchers representing 13 institutions across Canada, highlight long-standing weaknesses ...

Bisexual people experience worse health outcomes than other adults in England – national study of more than 835,000 people

2023-07-25
Self-reported data from lesbian, gay or bisexual (LGB) patients shows these groups have poorer health outcomes compared to those who identify as heterosexual, but bisexual people disproportionally experience the worst outcomes in England.    These new findings, published today in the peer-reviewed journal The Journal of Sex Research, indicate that bisexual people face additional health disparities within an already marginalised community.    Experts, from the Brighton and Sussex Medical School and Anglia Ruskin University who led the analysis of more than 835,000 adults in England, suggests the disparities could result from unique prejudice and discrimination ...

Family loses child to necrotizing enterocolitis and publishes “Forever Our Little One,” a storybook for bereaved families

Family loses child to necrotizing enterocolitis and publishes  “Forever Our Little One,” a storybook for bereaved families
2023-07-25
Davis, CA – Mother-daughter duo Jennifer Canvasser and Leslie Napolitano have published Forever Our Little One, a storybook for bereaved families. Jennifer is the executive director of the Necrotizing Enterocolitis (NEC) Society, which she founded after her son Micah tragically died from complications of NEC. Leslie is an artist and illustrator who helped care for her grandson Micah during his time in the neonatal and pediatric intensive care units. Jennifer wrote the storybook for families ...

Curbing waste improves global food security but has limited environmental benefits

2023-07-24
Irvine, Calif., July 24, 2023 – Reducing waste is one way to help combat hunger around the world, but stricter control over food loss and waste does not lead to better environmental outcomes, according to researchers at the University of California, Irvine and the University of Colorado Boulder. In a paper published recently in Nature Food, the scientists stress that curbing food spoilage increases the amount of produce in markets, which leads to lower costs. Cheaper food encourages people to buy and eat more, offsetting the lowering of greenhouse gas ...

Highlights from the journal CHEST®, July 2023

Highlights from the journal CHEST®, July 2023
2023-07-24
Glenview, Illinois – Published monthly, the journal CHEST® features peer-reviewed, cutting-edge original research in chest medicine: Pulmonary, critical care and sleep medicine and related disciplines. Journal topics include asthma, chest infections, COPD, critical care, diffuse lung disease, education and clinical practice, pulmonary vascular disease, sleep, thoracic oncology and the humanities. The July issue of the CHEST journal contains 49 articles, including clinically relevant research, reviews, case series, commentary and more. Each month, the journal ...

New study reveals self-replicating RNA and novel vaccine delivery technology demonstrate enhanced safety and efficacy

2023-07-24
As the world continues to combat various infectious diseases, the development of novel vaccine technologies remains at the forefront of scientific research. mRNA-based vaccines and utilization of lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) for their delivery, have recently shown encouraging results in diseases such as COVID-19. However, a critical concern revolves around the wide biodistribution of LNPs in the body, which, in some cases, may result in unintended side effects. A recent publication in the peer-reviewed ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Insilico Medicine featured in Harvard Business School case on Rentosertib

Towards unlocking the full potential of sodium- and potassium-ion batteries

UC Irvine-led team creates first cell type-specific gene regulatory maps for Alzheimer’s disease

Unraveling the mystery of why some cancer treatments stop working

From polls to public policy: how artificial intelligence is distorting online research

Climate policy must consider cross-border pollution “exchanges” to address inequality and achieve health benefits, research finds

What drives a mysterious sodium pump?

Study reveals new cellular mechanisms that allow the most common chronic cardiac arrhythmia to persist in the heart

Scientists discover new gatekeeper cell in the brain

High blood pressure: trained laypeople improve healthcare in rural Africa

Pitt research reveals protective key that may curb insulin-resistance and prevent diabetes

Queen Mary research results in changes to NHS guidelines

Sleep‑aligned fasting improves key heart and blood‑sugar markers

Releasing pollack at depth could benefit their long-term survival, study suggests

Addictive digital habits in early adolescence linked to mental health struggles, study finds

As tropical fish move north, UT San Antonio researcher tracks climate threats to Texas waterways

Rich medieval Danes bought graves ‘closer to God’ despite leprosy stigma, archaeologists find

Brexpiprazole as an adjunct therapy for cognitive dysfunction in schizophrenia

Applications of endovascular brain–computer interface in patients with Alzheimer's disease

Path Planning Transformers supervised by IRRT*-RRMS for multi-mobile robots

Nurses can deliver hospital care just as well as doctors

From surface to depth: 3D imaging traces vascular amyloid spread in the human brain

Breathing tube insertion before hospital admission for major trauma saves lives

Unseen planet or brown dwarf may have hidden 'rare' fading star

Study: Discontinuing antidepressants in pregnancy nearly doubles risk of mental health emergencies

Bipartisan members of congress relaunch Congressional Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD) Caucus with event that brings together lawmakers, medical experts, and patient advocates to address critical gap i

Antibody-drug conjugate achieves high response rates as frontline treatment in aggressive, rare blood cancer

Retina-inspired cascaded van der Waals heterostructures for photoelectric-ion neuromorphic computing

Seashells and coconut char: A coastal recipe for super-compost

Feeding biochar to cattle may help lock carbon in soil and cut agricultural emissions

[Press-News.org] What can central Utah’s earthquake ‘swarms’ reveal about the West’s seismicity?