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

Scientists find increase in microearthquakes after Chilean quake

2011-02-28
(Press-News.org) By studying seismographs from the earthquake that hit Chile last February, earth scientists at the Georgia Institute of Technology have found a statistically significant increase of microearthquakes in central California in the first few hours after the main shock. The observation provides an additional support that seismic waves from distant earthquakes could also trigger seismic events on the other side of the earth. The results may be found online in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

It has been well known that microearthquakes can be triggered instantaneously by distant earthquakes. However, sometimes the triggered events could occur long after the passage of the direct surface waves that take the shortest path on the earth surface. There are several other explanations out there about how such delayed triggering occurs. Some involve the redistribution of pore fluids and triggered aseismic creep, while others simply consider them as aftershocks of the directly triggered events. But the group from Georgia Tech found something different.

"From our research, we've concluded the delayed triggering that occurs in the first few hours after an earthquake could be caused by multiple surface waves traveling back and forth around the earth multiple times," said Zhigang Peng, assistant professor in the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at Georgia Tech.

In a previous paper, also published in Geophysical Research Letters last December, Peng's research group found that the direct surface waves of the Chilean earthquake triggered seismic activity in central California. In this new study, Peng's group looked beyond the direct surface waves and focused on secondary and tertiary waves that return after traveling across the globe multiple times. In addition, they went beyond earthquake information published in the U.S. Geological Survey catalog and instead studied the seismographs.

"So when you look at the events that have been reported in the catalog, you won't see this effect," said Peng. "But if you look at the seismographs, you'll see many small events and notice that they occurred mostly when those multiple surface waves arrived."

Peng said that the finding is significant because it also suggests that scientists can look beyond the direct surface waves and understand that those later-arriving waves could affect the seismic activity on the other side of the earth. But his team believes that seismic waves circle the globe only for large earthquakes. They are currently examining other regions and quakes to see just how widespread this effect is.

INFORMATION:

Peng's research group includes graduate students Chunquan Wu and Chastity Aiken. Their research was supported by the National Science Foundation.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New study shows marine 'networks' can protect fish stocks

New study shows marine networks can protect fish stocks
2011-02-28
MIAMI -- University of Miami (UM) Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science faculty were part of an international scientific team to show that strong links between the corals reefs of the South China Sea, West Pacific and Coral Triangle hold the key to preserving fish and marine resources in the Asia-Pacific region. Rosenstiel School researchers Drs. Claire Paris and Robert Cowen and colleagues from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies at James Cook University and University of California - Los Angeles, have established that the richest marine region ...

Listening to music is biological

2011-02-28
Music is listened in all known cultures. Similarities between human and animal song have been detected: both contain a message, an intention that reflects innate emotional state that is interpreted correctly even among different species. In fact, several behavioral features in listening to music are closely related to attachment: lullabies are song to infants to increase their attachment to a parent, and singing or playing music together is based on teamwork and may add group cohesion. In the study of University of Helsinki and Sibelius-Academy, Helsinki, the biological ...

Happy children make happy adults

2011-02-28
Being a 'happy' teenager is linked to increased well-being in adulthood, new research finds. Much is known about the associations between a troubled childhood and mental health problems, but little research has examined the affect of a positive childhood. For the first time, researchers from the University of Cambridge and the MRC Unit for Lifelong Health and Ageing have analysed the link between a positive adolescence and well-being in midlife. Using information from 2776 individuals who participated in the 1946 British birth cohort study, the scientists tested ...

Heparin a key role player in allergy and inflammatory reactions

2011-02-28
Heparin plays a key role in allergic and inflammatory reactions driven by mast cells, scientists from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden shows in an international collaboration involving colleagues from Germany and Switzerland. The study is published in the recent issue of Immunity, and sheds some new light on the biological function of heparin. Heparin has a long history at Karolinska Institutet, since here the substance was originally purified and its chemical structure was characterized back in 1935 by Professor Erik Jorpes. Knowing about the therapeutic implications ...

Researchers have found how brain cells control their movement to form the cerebral cortex

2011-02-28
A study led by Academy Research Fellow Eleanor Coffey identifies new players that put the brakes on. They show in mice that lack the star player "JNK1", that newborn neurons spend less time in the multipolar stage, which is when the cells prepare for subsequent expedition, possibly choosing the route to be taken. Having hurried through this stage, they move off at high speed to reach their final destinations in the cortex days earlier and less precisely than in a normal mouse. The results of their study are published in the latest issue of Nature Neuroscience. Incorrect ...

Guidelines and reality

2011-02-28
Whether doctors have knowledge of guidelines or not appears to be unsuitable as an indicator of how guidelines are being put into practice in the clinical routine. Taking the case of treatment by primary care physicians of three target diseases – hypertension, heart failure, and chronic coronary heart disease – in the current edition of Deutsches Ärzteblatt International (Dtsch Arztebl Int 2011; 108(5) 61-9) Ute Karbach and her coauthors investigate the relationship for physicians between knowing the guidelines and acting in compliance with them. Data on 437 physicians' ...

Planning and visualization lead to better food habits

2011-02-28
If you want to improve the way you eat, the best way to do so is to both make an action plan and visualize yourself carrying it out, according to McGill researchers. "Telling people to just change the way they eat doesn't work; we've known that for a while," says Bärbel Knäuper of McGill's Department of Psychology."But research has shown that if people make a concrete plan about what they are going to do, they are better at acting on their intentions. What we've done that's new is to add visualization techniques to the action plan." In a study recently published in ...

TCD scientists discover that self-eating cells safeguard against cancer

2011-02-28
Scientists at Trinity College Dublin have made an important discovery concerning how fledgling cancer cells self-destruct, which has the potential of impacting on future cancer therapies. The Trinity research group, led by Smurfit Professor of Medical Genetics, Professor Seamus Martin and funded by Science Foundation Ireland, has just published their findings in the internationally renowned journal, Molecular Cell. Professor Martin's team has discovered how a process called 'autophagy' – which literally means 'self-eating' – plays an important role in safeguarding against ...

Direct electronic readout of 'artificial atoms'

Direct electronic readout of artificial atoms
2011-02-28
Through his participation, the research team from Bochum, Duisburg-Essen, and Hamburg now has succeeded in an energy-state occupancy readout of those artificial atoms – using common interfaces to classic computers. This is a big step towards the application of such systems. They report about their findings in Nature Communications. One million instead of individual atoms In principle, the spin of electrons in individual atoms can be read-out, but the minuteness of the signals and the difficulty of localising individual atoms limit this technology to highly specialised ...

HIV makes protein that may help virus's resurgence

2011-02-28
New research enhances the current knowledge of how human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1), which causes AIDS, controls the cell cycle of cells that it infects. The new findings may shed light on how the virus reactivates after entering a dormant state, called latency. "As we better understand the biological events that revive HIV from latency, we hope to devise ways to eventually intervene in this process with better treatments for people with HIV infection," said study leader Terri H. Finkel, M.D., Ph.D., chief of Rheumatology at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Finkel ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

No quantum exorcism for Maxwell's demon (but it doesn't need one)

Balancing the pressure: How plant cells protect their vacuoles

Electronic reporting of symptoms by cancer patients can improve quality of life and reduce emergency visits

DNA barcodes and citizen science images map spread of biocontrol agent for control of major invasive shrub

Pregnancy complications linked to cardiovascular disease in the family

Pancreatic cancer immune map provides clues for precision treatment targeting

How neighborhood perception affects housing rents: A novel analytical approach

Many adults report inaccurate beliefs about risks and benefits of home firearm access

Air pollution impacts an aging society

UC Davis researchers achieve total synthesis of ibogaine

Building better biomaterials for cancer treatments

Brain stimulation did not improve impaired motor skills after stroke

Some species of baleen whales avoid attracting killer whales by singing too low to be heard

Wasteful tests before surgery: Study shows how to reduce them safely

UCalgary researchers confirm best approach for stroke in medium-sized blood vessels

Nationwide, 34 local schools win NFL PLAY 60 grants to help students move more

New software developed at Wayne State University will help study chemical and biological systems

uOttawa study unveils new insights into how neural stem cells are activated in the adult human brain

Cystic fibrosis damages the immune system early on

Novel ‘living’ biomaterial aims to advance regenerative medicine

Warding off superbugs with a pinch of turmeric

Ophthalmic complications in patients on antidiabetic GLP-1 medications are concerning neuro-ophthalmologists

Physicians committee research policy director speaks today at hearing on taxpayer funded animal cruelty

New technology lights way for accelerating coral reef restoration

Electroencephalography may help guide treatments for language disorders

Multinational research project shows how life on Earth can be measured from space

Essential genome of malaria parasite Plasmodium knowlesi mapped

Ice streams move due to tiny ice quakes

Whale song has remarkable similarities to human speech in terms of efficiency

Uncovered: How mice override instinctive fear responses

[Press-News.org] Scientists find increase in microearthquakes after Chilean quake