Convulsion
on the Coast of
A magnitude
8.5 earthquake rocked
An
earthquake lasted 32 years, and scientists want to know how
The slow
quake—the longest ever recorded—ended in disaster in 1861. Experts are racing
to find today’s equivalents.
BYMAYA
WEI-HAAS
PUBLISHED
MAY 28, 2021
An earthquake lasted 32 years, and scientists want to know how (nationalgeographic.com)
When a
magnitude 8.5 mega-earthquake struck off the Indonesian
Now, it
seems that tragic event was no isolated incident: It actually marked the end of
the longest earthquake ever recorded, which crept through the subsurface for a
whopping 32 years. Known as a slow-slip event, these kinds of quakes have been
known to unfurl over days, months, or years. But the newly described event
lasted more than twice as long as the past record-holder, scientists report in
Nature Geoscience.
"I
wouldn’t have believed that we would find a slow-slip event so long, but here
we found it," says study author Emma Hill, a geodesist at
The
discovery of such a slow-moving earthquake promises to help scientists grasp
the surprising variety of ways our restless planet moves—and the deadly
potential for these silent events to spark much more potent quakes.
Much like
their high-speed cousins, slow-motion earthquakes release energy built up from
the shifts of tectonic plates. But instead of unleashing it in a
ground-rattling burst, slow quakes sluggishly release strain over time, and so
are not hazards on their own. Still, the subtle shifts of the subsurface
potentially load strain on adjacent zones along a fault, which could increase
the risk of a bigger temblor nearby.
Other areas
of
"It's
not just one isolated event in the 1800s," Mallick says. "We're
seeing this happen right now."
Clues
written in coral
The new
study relies on an unexpected scribe of Earth's tectonic shifts: coral.
Some types
of coral, such as the finger-like Porites, grow outward and upward until they
are lingering just below the water's surface. If the water rises, the coral
rapidly shoots upward again. If the water drops, the coral exposed to the air
dies, while the submerged part continues growing outward. Because these corals
bulk up in layers, like trees growing in concentric rings, scientists can use
their skeletons to chart relative water level changes over time.
"They
basically act like natural tidal gauges," Hill says.
Changes in
sea level can come from climate change-driven factors, such as melting
glaciers, or from shifts in the height of the landscape. Off
In this
zone, the Australian tectonic plate plunges beneath the Sunda plate, but it
gets stuck along a zone directly beneath an arc of Indonesian islands. As the
plates collide, the descending slab tugs on the land above. This flexes the
surface, which pulls the plate's edge lower into the sea, but causes other
parts of the plate to rise.
If the
strain builds so high that an earthquake rips through the region, the land will
abruptly shift, reversing the effect and sending some coastal areas shooting
upward. Just such a shift happened after a magnitude 8.7 quake gripped
"As
the reef moved up in the earthquake, the entire ecosystem was left exactly in
place," study co-author Aron
Meltzner wrote in a blog about his 2005 field experiences while a Ph.D. student
at CalTech. Branching corals, sea urchins, shellfish, crabs, and "an
occasional unlucky fish" all lay dead or dying, exposed on nearly dry
land.
Meltzner,
who is now a geologist at
Before
1829, the ground near the
In 2016,
Earthquake
flavors
Slow
earthquakes have only been recognized since the late 1990s, when they were
initially spotted in the Pacific Northwest of North America and in the Nankai
region off the coast of
Yet the
more places researchers have looked since then, the more slow earthquakes
they've found, from the coasts of
Slow-motion
quakes take on many different flavors. In Cascadia and Nankai, the slow quakes
strike with remarkable regularity, stirring every 14 months or so in Cascadia
and every three to six months in Nankai. In both locations, these long-duration
quakes are also accompanied by a slew of tiny quakes known as tremors.
Bruhat
likens the process to a person walking across a wooden floor. "You're moving
and the wood is cracking around you," she says. "All the cracks would
be tremors."
Over the
years, scientists have also found that the duration of slow quakes can vastly
differ. In
"A lot
of people have suggested that these bigger, longer slow-slip events are
possible," says Laura Wallace, a geophysicist at the
Keeping
tabs
Understanding
these slow events is crucial to grasping the potential risks they pose for
triggering bigger temblors. Slow slips preceded many of the mightiest
earthquakes ever recorded, including
"It’s
a hot topic right now in the field," says Noel Bartlow, a geophysicist
specializing in slow earthquakes at the
"The
evidence is kind of growing, but it's still limited to a few case
studies," she says.
Part of the
problem is that catching a long-lived temblor in the act is not easy. The
lengthy quake in the new study crept along a shallow section of the fault,
which lies underwater away from the land, Bartlow explains. But traditional GPS
stations are useless on the seafloor since their signals don't penetrate very
far through water. And few spots on Earth have a natural record of such
movements akin to the corals of
There are
instruments that can help, but they're pricey, Bartlow says. She's planning to
search for similar shallow slow-slip events off the coast of the
Though
monitoring is often considered one of the "less sexy things"
scientists can do, Hill says, it's vital to understanding our planet in all its
complexities.
"Whenever
we think we understand tectonics, then the Earth will throw another surprise at
us," Hill says. "The more we collect these really long datasets, the
more surprises like this that we’re going to get."
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