a brief history of seismology early 1800’s – theoretical development of elastic wave propagation...

Post on 20-Jan-2016

216 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

A brief history of seismology

• Early 1800’s – theoretical development of elastic wave propagation (Cauchy, Poisson, Stokes, Rayleigh, etc)– knew about body waves and surface waves long before observed

• 1857 Mallett, Naples – concept that earthquakes radiate seismic waves (though he assumed that all sources were explosions and only radiated P waves)

History -- continued

• First time-recording seismometer (Cecchi, 1875)• Deployments of seismometers in Japan by Milne et

al. in 1880’s• First teleseism recorded in 1889• 1896 – first seismometer in US (at Lick observatory)• 1898 – first damped seismometer (Wiechert)• Early 1900’s electromagnetic sensing (Galitzin)

History--continued

• Recording earthquakes at various ranges led to velocity structure

• Oldham (1900) identifed P and S and surface waves• Oldham (1906) identified the core shadow• Mohorovicic (1909) identified crust-mantle boundary• Travel time tables (Zoppritz 1907, Gutenberg, 1914

(radius of the core), JB

Raypaths for P and S demonstrating the core shadow

Example of travel time curves

History continued

• 1928 Wadati identifies existence of deep earthquakes – Wadati-Benioff zones (still not understood how deep earthquakes happen)

• Nuclear tests (1946 Bikini atoll, 1949 first Russian test) – later go underground – lots of bucks for seismology

• 1961 WWSSN• 1960’s computers, ISC started in 1964 – vast improvement in location

ability – see plate boundaries• 1960 Chile eq (M=9.5) – free oscillations • 1960—1980 Geophysical inverse theory developed largely to look at Earth

structure – 1D structure including mantle discontinuities firmly established.

• 1984 – beginning of IRIS – easy access to data• 1990– seismic tomography, imaging the 3D structure

Shear velocity -- +-1% isovelocity surfaces

Includes S and SS cluster analysis data

Seismometers on the moon 1969--1972

Continuously excited oscillations of the sun observed by lookingat doppler shift of spectral lines -- helioseismology

History -- continued

• Reid develops “elastic rebound theory” after 1906 earthquake

• 1923 Nakano develops double-couple model of the seismic source (controversial until the 60’s!)

• 1935 – development of Richter magnitude scale (better estimate of size is “moment” developed by Aki in 1966)

Image of slip surface outlines 1300-km-long earthquake, lasting for about 8 minutes

This could be produced for future events within 20 to 30 minutes of the earthquake start time

top related