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Hervé
23rd June 2016, 13:34
Silent 'slow slip' earthquake detected off Gisborne, New Zealand (http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/national/307118/silent-quake-under-way-off-gisborne)

Radio New Zealand (http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/national/307118/silent-quake-under-way-off-gisborne) Thu, 23 Jun 2016 03:56 UTC


http://www.radionz.co.nz/assets/news/68710/four_col_slowSlip_image.jpg?1463450162http://www.radionz.co.nz/assets/news/39423/four_col_jc15018pc_Hikurangi_Margin.jpg?1431947447
Diagram showing the Hikurangi Margin.





https://www.sott.net/image/s16/326977/full/silent_earthquake_plotted.jpg
© GeoNet A silent earthquake's movement is plotted

A 'silent' earthquake that's been happening for a week, and could continue for months, has been detected off the coast of Gisborne.

GeoNet said today that the event, which could move faults at the equivalent of magnitude 5 or higher regular earthquakes, had just been detected (http://info.geonet.org.nz/display/quake/2016/06/23/Week-long+silent+earthquake+starting+off+Gisborne) and was being monitored.

The slow-motion earthquakes, also known as "slow slips", are undetectable by humans or seismographs, and are instead measured using changes in distance between global positioning system stations across the North Island.

They have been shown (http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/national/303169/%27slow-slips%27-could-trigger-big-quakes)to be able to trigger - or alleviate - large, tsunami-generating earthquakes.

Follow slow-slip motion on GeoNet (http://info.geonet.org.nz/display/home/Slow-Slip+Watch)

The agency said a magnitude 4 earthquake off the coast of Gisborne last week was likely related.

The phenomenon is fairly new to science and, after being discovered in the United States, was first located in New Zealand in the early 2000s.

GNS Science seismologist Stephen Bannister said in 2014 the earthquakes occurred every one to two years in the Gisborne area, pushing sections of Poverty Bay eastward by 2-3cm.

They are found around the world in subduction margins, where one tectonic plate is slipping under another into the earth's mantle.

New Zealand scientists and colleagues from the US and Japan have been studying silent earthquakes (http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/national/276678/gisborne-earthquake-mission-underway) in the Gisborne and Hawke's Bay areas since May 2014, comparing the timing of earthquakes with the motion of the sea floor.

The group, known as HOBITTS (Hikurangi Ocean Bottom Investigation of Tremor and Slow Slip), was hoping its research could improve scientists' ability to predict earthquake hazards.

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Something about the above article which needs to be clarified and that's this oxymoron: "silent earthquake"

An earthquake (http://www.thefreedictionary.com/earthquake), by definition cannot be "silent." It is the result of a sudden, "explosive" displacement (rupture) that generates mild to heavy "noises" in the form of seismic waves perceived by humans and causing no-to-severe damages.

Accordingly:


Sudden, explosive rupture/slip = earthquake



Slow displacement/slip = slow slip

The following statement shows how confused the writer of that article is about the whole concept:


A 'silent' earthquake...... it's 'silent' because it isn't an earthquake and should have been stated as:


A silent 'earthquake'...What the GPS data show is a periodical/cyclical readjustment of the plates with respect to one another that's non-"explosive"/non-sudden because it occurs over a sufficiently long period of time to be non-detectable by humans or seismographs and which is what a "subduction (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subduction)" is expected to do along its subduction plane.

What these data also show is that the subduction plane is sufficiently "greased"/lubricated to allow for these "slow slips" to occur and thereby preventing the accumulation of elastic stress leading to "explosive" release of accumulated energy, i.e. earthquake.

seeker/reader
23rd June 2016, 22:41
What these data also show is that the subduction plane is sufficiently "greased"/lubricated to allow for these "slow slips" to occur and thereby preventing the accumulation of elastic stress leading to "explosive" release of accumulated energy, i.e. earthquake.

So what is greasing the subduction zone? Is there a special type of sea floor sediment? Plastic mud?

Hervé
24th June 2016, 00:39
[...]
So what is greasing the subduction zone? Is there a special type of sea floor sediment? Plastic mud?

The main ingredient is the water content (https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/11/111130142245.htm) along the subduction plane (considered as a fault zone) whether that be from hydrothermal circulation/activity or from the minerals' water content (hydrated or "dry")

seeker/reader
24th June 2016, 14:17
Maybe plastic clay, which likes to absorb water, is doing just that, taking lots of water down into the subduction zone. Hence my point about specific types of sediment. The plastic clay, acts plasticly and deforms by slipping rather than fracturing.