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

Researchers discover mechanism that can ramp up magnitude of certain earthquakes

2025-09-29
(Press-News.org) In July 2024, a 7.4-magnitude earthquake struck Calama, Chile, damaging buildings and causing power outages.

The country has endured violent earthquakes, including the most powerful recorded in history: a 9.5-magnitude “megathrust” event that struck central Chile in 1960, causing a tsunami and killing between 1,000 to 6,000 people. However, the Calama quake was different from the megathrust quakes that are usually associated with the most destructive events in Chile and around the world.

Megathrust earthquakes occur at relatively shallow depths. But the Calama quake occurred much deeper underground, at 125 kilometers beneath the Earth’s surface and within the tectonic slab itself.

Earthquakes this deep usually produce much more subdued shaking on the surface. But in the case of Calama, a sequence of events, discovered by researchers at The University of Texas at Austin, helped supercharge its strength. In a recent study in Nature Communications the researchers describe a newly-discovered chain of events that was responsible for increasing the earthquake’s intensity.

In addition to helping explain the tectonic forces behind the powerful quake, the findings have implications for future earthquake hazard assessments.

“These Chilean events are causing more shaking than is normally expected from intermediate-depth earthquakes, and can be quite destructive,” said the study’s lead author Zhe Jia, a research assistant professor at the UT Jackson School of Geosciences. “Our goal is to learn more about how these earthquakes occur, so our research could support emergency response and long-term planning.”

Intermediate-depth earthquakes, such as the one in Calama, were long thought to occur due to pressure building up as the rock dried out – a phenomenon called “dehydration embrittlement.” This process happens when a subducting tectonic plate dives toward the Earth’s hot interior, and the increased heat and pressure forces water out of the minerals within the rock. The dehydrated rocks are weakened and fractured, which can lead them to rupture – triggering an earthquake in the slab.

This dehydration process is typically thought to stop where temperatures exceed 650 degrees Celsius. But according to the researchers, the Calama quake was so powerful because it breached this limit – going 50 kilometers deeper into hotter zones through a second mechanism called “thermal runway.” This involves immense friction from the initial slip generating a large amount of heat at the tip of the rupture, which helps weaken material around it and propels the rupture forward.

“It’s the first time we saw an intermediate-depth earthquake break assumptions, rupturing from a cold zone into a really hot one, and traveling at much faster speeds,” said Jia, who is part of the University of Texas Institute for Geophysics (UTIG), a research unit of the Jackson School. “That indicates the mechanism changed from dehydration embrittlement to thermal runaway.”

To determine how the earthquake deformed and the extent of the rupture, the University of Texas team collaborated with researchers in Chile and the United States to integrate multiple types of analyses. This included analyzing seismic data from Chile that captured the rupture’s propagation and speed, geopositioning data from the Global Navigation Satellite System to measure how the fault slipped, and computer simulations to estimate the temperature and composition where the earthquake ruptured.

“The fact that another large earthquake is overdue in Chile has motivated earthquake research and the deployment of multiple seismometers and geodetic stations to monitor earthquakes and how the crust is deforming in the region,” said Thorsten Becker, a co-author of the study and a professor at the Jackson School’s Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences and a senior research scientist at UTIG.

Becker and Jia said that learning more about how earthquakes occur at different depths could help with understanding what controls the size and nature of likely future events, which could help predict the degree of shaking and inform infrastructure planning, early warning systems, and rapid response systems.

The research was funded by the National Science Foundation, Agencia Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo (ANID), Chile, UC Open Seed Fund, Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities, and the University of Texas Institute for Geophysics.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

MS does not worsen menopause symptoms: study

2025-09-29
The largest study of its kind has found menopause is not associated with an increased risk of disability in women with multiple sclerosis (MS). Until now, the impact of reduced sex hormones on women with MS had only been the subject of small studies, some with conflicting results. Published in JAMA Neurology, the Monash University-led project assessed whether menopause modified the risk of disability progression for women with relapse-onset MS. It did not. MS is a chronic autoimmune and neurodegenerative condition, which impacts the immune and nervous ...

Radiation therapy shows promise for patients with severe heart rhythm disorder

2025-09-29
SAN FRANCISCO, September 29, 2025 — Radiation therapy may offer a comparable and potentially safer alternative to repeat catheter ablation for patients with severe abnormal heart rhythms that can no longer be controlled with medication. In the first study to directly compare cardiac radiation with standard catheter ablation for ventricular tachycardia, patients treated with cardiac radiation experienced fewer complications with similar effectiveness at controlling disease than those treated with cardiac ablation. Findings of the retrospective ...

NRG Oncology trial results show favorable bowel health related quality of life outcomes for localized immediate risk prostate cancer treated with stereotactic body radiation therapy

2025-09-29
Results of the NRG Oncology NRG-GU005 clinical study comparing stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) to moderately hypofractionated intensity-modulated radiation therapy (MH-IMRT) for patients with localized immediate risk prostate cancer indicate that the use of SBRT improved bowel health related quality of life (HRQOL) in this patient population. There was no significant improvement seen for the other primary objectives including urinary HRQOL and there was a lack of improvement in distant-free survival for patients. These results were recently reported during the Plenary Session of the American ...

Could nasal sprays replace needles for delivering adrenaline to anaphylactic patients?

2025-09-29
Vienna, Austria: Instead of stabbing yourself, or someone else, in the thigh with a needle to deliver a dose of adrenaline to counter anaphylactic shock, would it not be easier to use a nasal spray instead? A study presented at the European Emergency Medicine Congress today (Tuesday) shows that liquid or powder nasal sprays are as effective and sometimes even better than injection devices such as EpiPens® for delivering adrenaline [1]. Anaphylaxis is an acute allergic reaction to substances, such as nuts or insect bites or stings, and is a life-threatening emergency. A patient who goes into ...

Children lose 8.45 million days of healthy life due to second hand smoke

2025-09-29
Children lose 8.45 million days of healthy life each year globally due to second hand smoke, according to research presented at the European Respiratory Society Congress in Amsterdam, the Netherlands [1]. Children from low socio-economic regions face the biggest impact of breathing second hand smoke, also known as passive smoking. The study was presented by Dr Siyu Dai, Assistant Professor in the School of Clinical Medicine at Hangzhou Normal University and an Honorary Research Associate in the Department of Paediatrics at The Chinese University of Hong Kong. She told the Congress: “Second-hand smoke is a major contributor ...

Indoor wood burners linked to a decline in lung function

2025-09-29
Using a wood burning stove at home can lead to a decline in lung function, according to research presented at the European Respiratory Society Congress in Amsterdam, the Netherlands [1]. The study was presented by Dr Laura Horsfall, Principal Research Fellow from the Institute of Health Informatics, University College London, UK. The use of solid fuel for domestic heating has increased in Europe due to the marketing of wood as renewable energy and high fossil fuel prices. In the UK, the proportion of harmful ...

Yale researchers develop novel test for leptospirosis

2025-09-29
New Haven, Conn. — In a new study, Yale School of Medicine (YSM) researchers unveiled a novel diagnostic method for detecting leptospiral virulence-modifying (VM) proteins in the blood and urine of hamsters, an advance that could pave the way for early diagnosis of the tropical disease leptospirosis in humans and improved treatment options. The findings were published in the journal Microbiology Spectrum. Found around the world, leptospirosis affects approximately 1 million people annually, with nearly 60,000 fatalities. The disease is caused by the bacterium Leptospira and is spread ...

Medicaid unwinding associated with less medication treatment for opioid use disorder

2025-09-29
The end of pandemic-era enrollment enhancements for Medicaid was associated with a rise in the number of people ending medication treatment for opioid use disorder, as well as a decrease in the number of people beginning such treatment, according to a new RAND study.   While some people who disenrolled from Medicaid may have found other methods to pay for drug treatment, the overall number of those initiating and continuing medication treatment for opioid use disorder declined in the six months after Medicaid unwinding began. The changes were greatest in states that have had the largest disenrollments.   The study ...

Rapid flash Joule heating technique unlocks efficient rare‑earth element recovery from electronic waste

2025-09-29
A team of researchers including Rice University’s James Tour and Shichen Xu has developed an ultrafast, one-step method to recover rare earth elements (REEs) from discarded magnets using an innovative approach that offers significant environmental and economic benefits over traditional recycling methods. Their study was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Sept. 29, 2025. Conventional rare earth recycling is energy-heavy and creates toxic waste. The research team’s method uses flash Joule heating (FJH), which rapidly raises material temperatures to thousands of degrees within milliseconds, and chlorine gas to extract REEs from ...

First randomized study comparing proton and photon radiation therapy for breast cancer finds both preserve quality of life

2025-09-29
SAN FRANCISCO, September 29, 2025 — The first randomized trial to compare photon- and proton-based radiation therapy for breast cancer finds that patients report equally strong health-related quality of life with either treatment. Patients who received proton therapy were more likely to say they would recommend or choose it again, but overall patient-reported outcomes were similar. The phase III Radiotherapy Comparative Effectiveness (RadComp) trial enrolled more than 1,200 patients, making it also the largest head-to-head comparison of photon and proton therapy for any ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Tiny but mighty: Groundbreaking study reveals mosses are secret carbon heroes in subtropical forests

The relaxed birder

Ten-year clinical trial report finds radiation comparable to surgery for early-stage non-small cell lung cancer

Ketamine deaths increase twenty-fold since 2015 with mixing drugs on the rise

Hidden genetic risk could delay diabetes diagnosis for Black and Asian men

Researchers discover mechanism that can ramp up magnitude of certain earthquakes

MS does not worsen menopause symptoms: study

Radiation therapy shows promise for patients with severe heart rhythm disorder

NRG Oncology trial results show favorable bowel health related quality of life outcomes for localized immediate risk prostate cancer treated with stereotactic body radiation therapy

Could nasal sprays replace needles for delivering adrenaline to anaphylactic patients?

Children lose 8.45 million days of healthy life due to second hand smoke

Indoor wood burners linked to a decline in lung function

Yale researchers develop novel test for leptospirosis

Medicaid unwinding associated with less medication treatment for opioid use disorder

Rapid flash Joule heating technique unlocks efficient rare‑earth element recovery from electronic waste

First randomized study comparing proton and photon radiation therapy for breast cancer finds both preserve quality of life

Shorter radiation improves patient experience but not disease control for intermediate-risk prostate cancer

Scientists successfully recreate wildfire-induced thunderstorms in Earth system models for the first time

AI tool may enable opportunistic assessment of body composition from routine imaging, identify patients at cardiovascular risk

Too heavy for medical care: Over 40% of specialty clinics turn away patients weighing 465 pounds

AI body composition measurements can predict cardiometabolic risk

Actin scaffold in cell nucleus explains survival of cancer cells

By studying yellow warbler, researchers hope to better understand response to rapid climate change in wild species

New drug and enzyme class found to have anti-ageing properties

New tool identifies proteins that control gene activity

New study reveals why nature picked today’s proteins

The first animals on Earth may have been sea sponges, study suggests

Scientists map the navigation styles of wild cats and dogs

Polyphenols Applications World Congress and Iprona will launch Global Call to Advance Robust, Reproducible Polyphenol Research, next October in Malta

Adaptive radiation therapy increases safety and preserves quality of life, says study

[Press-News.org] Researchers discover mechanism that can ramp up magnitude of certain earthquakes