New Scientist
Sat, 07 Nov 2009 00:09 EST
Low-level seismic rumbles appear to foreshadow many quakes. Yet not always: the 2008 Sichuan quake in China came out of the blue. These rumbles may not be precursors but aftershocks - readjustments at a fault following a larger event, in some cases centuries earlier.
Seth Stein of Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, and colleagues analysed the rate of fault slip in various tectonic settings. At plate boundaries, motion rapidly "reloads" a fault with new stress and changes conditions there, so tremors that can be clearly identified as aftershocks typically end within a decade, they found. Far away from plate boundaries, however, fault reloading is much slower, and aftershocks can continue for hundreds of years. The New Madrid fault in Missouri, for instance, may be experiencing aftershocks from a quake in the early 1800s (Nature, DOI: link).
Seismic activity away from plate boundaries "tells you more about where large quakes were than where the next one will be", says Stein




















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IMO this is just another attempt by main-stream scientist to explain away the impending earth changes that are already taking place. They don't want to panic the public. They tell us land masses and mountains are formed or moved over millions of years when it is possible these things could happen suddenly.