Scripps geophysicists develop technologies for monitoring underwater landslides.
By Chuck Colgan
When earthquakes strike along the coastline, it isn't just the
shaking that can wreak havoc, but a one-two punch of tremors setting
off undersea landslides that may produce the most devastation. That
was the case in 1998 when a magnitude 7.1 quake off Papua New Guinea
triggered an underwater slope collapse that pushed a 15-meter
(50-foot) tsunami over the shoreline, destroying seven villages and
killing more than 2,000 people.
Sites with the potential for underwater landslides exist all round
the Pacific's Ring of Fire, where 90 percent of the world's
earthquakes occur, but predicting where submarine slopes may slip is
limited by a lack of monitoring capabilities. That's why several
Scripps Institution of Oceanography geophysicists have come together
to develop strategies and technologies for observing coastal sites
where landslides are likely to happen. They've been joined in this
effort by the energy producer BP America Inc. that put up $3 million
for the research over the past three years. The project's goal has
been to better understand seabed dynamics with an eye on improving
design and safety of offshore facilities, from drilling platforms to
pipelines.
"The partnership is part of a strategy at Scripps to work closely
with the private sector in areas where there are mutual interests,"
said John Orcutt, a Scripps geophysicist and director of UC San
Diego's Center for Earth Observations and Applications. "The
seafloor technology being developed through this partnership with BP
will be invaluable in future long-term state and federal observing
systems in the oceans."
Scientists launch a high-resolution sonar instrument used to map
underwater geological features.
The Scripps scientists in the project are advancing a wide variety
of geological survey techniques, including electromagnetics, fiber
optics, acoustics, ocean bottom seismographs, and autonomous
underwater vehicles. Their objective is to be able to detect and
measure very small seabed deformations with an arsenal of
instruments to determine if specific geological features may be
precursors to large-scale slope failures.
The initial studies focus on steep underwater slopes that dip down
from the shoreline off Santa Barbara, Calif., where there is
evidence of landslides at different times in the past. Along the
northern flank of the Santa Barbara basin off Goleta there is a
monstrous scar from a huge landslide of some 1.5 cubic kilometers
(.35 cubic miles) of sediments that most likely collapsed some 2,500
years ago.
"The area has all of the ingredients that lead to slope
failure–active cracks, a high level of earthquake activity,
increased water pore pressure in the sediments, and tectonic
deformation," said Neal Driscoll, a Scripps geologist. "We don't
really know how these processes interact as we are rarely at such a
site before events occur. We'll gain tremendous insight by placing
instruments in this area and watching what happens."
The first step in the monitoring program was to conduct an extensive
survey of the region to produce detailed seafloor maps. In 2004,
Driscoll and his colleagues towed a high-resolution sonar instrument
that he designed from behind Scripps research vessel Robert Gordon
Sproul to acquire more than 1,000 kilometers (620 miles) of underway
data. They also collected sediment cores to measure pore water
pressure and for chemical analysis.
Fortunately for the scientists, yet potentially unfortunate for
Santa Barbara residents, a small seafloor crack about 50 meters (165
feet) wide and 2 kilometers (1.25 miles) long exists on a steep
slope in an area called the Gaviota slide where about 20 million
cubic meters (26 million cubic yards) of material slid as a result
of two offshore earthquakes in excess of 7 magnitude offshore Santa
Barbara on Dec. 21, 1812. The scientists chose this slope as their
study site in hope of answering the question of whether the crack is
widening from slow creeping of the seafloor or if the material
beneath it will move in a single slip, creating the threat of a
tsunami. It is unclear from historical writings whether the 1812
earthquake and underwater landslide created a tsunami. While some
maritime reports describe large waves that forced ships to sea,
today scientists estimate at most a wave of about 1 meter (3.3 feet)
would have been generated.
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