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95738


Date: March 10, 2022 at 22:38:07
From: JTRIV, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Mountain-Sized Rock Hidden Underneath Japan Could Be a Magnet For Mega

URL: Mountain-Sized Rock Hidden Underneath Japan Could Be a Magnet For Megaquakes


Mountain-Sized Rock Hidden Underneath Japan Could Be
a Magnet For Megaquakes


MICHELLE STARR8 FEBRUARY 2022
A mountain-sized mass of igneous rock beneath the coast
of southern Japan could be acting as a sort of magnet
or lightning rod for huge earthquakes.

According to a new 3D visualization of the feature,
known as the Kumano Pluton, the tectonic energy from
megaquakes seems to be diverted to several points along
its side.

This could help scientists better predict the impact of
massive quakes in the region, as well as better
understand how these igneous masses interact with
tectonic activity.

"We cannot predict exactly when, where, or how large
future earthquakes will be, but by combining our model
with monitoring data, we can begin estimating near-
future processes," says geophysicist Shuichi Kodaira of
the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and
Technology in Japan.

"That will provide very important data for the Japanese
public to prepare for the next big earthquake."

Hints of the Kumano Pluton were first revealed in 2006.
It is, as the name suggests, a rock feature known as a
pluton – an intrusion of igneous rock that displaces
rock underground, slowly cooling and hardening in a
large chunk.

Seismic imaging revealed that there was something of a
different density to the surrounding rock on the Nankai
subduction zone; that's the region along which one
tectonic plate slips beneath the edge of another,
accompanied by heightened earthquake and volcanic
activity. Numerical simulations helped reveal that the
chunk was plutonic.

But the true extent of it remained unexplored. Now,
using 20 years' worth of seismic data from the Nankai
subduction zone, a team of researchers has mapped the
entirety of the Kumano Pluton.

Quakes and tremors, while destructive, can also be a
very powerful tool, you see. Quakes are quite marvelous
things, really. They ripple out from their point of
origin, propagating through the planet, and bouncing
around.

The way these seismic waves travel through and reflect
off certain materials allows seismologists to map
structures we can't see deep underground.

It was painstaking work, comprising not just the
millions of seismic recordings from Japan's network of
earthquake sensors, but also those of other passing
scientific surveys, for the largest seismic data set
ever created.

The vast amount of data the team compiled on the Nankai
subduction zone was fed into the LoneStar5
supercomputer at the University of Texas at Austin to
generate a high-resolution 3D model of the pluton.
Fascinatingly, it revealed features we hadn't seen
before.

The model shows that the pluton's weight is causing
Earth's crust beneath it to bend under the strain, and
bulge upward slightly above it. Surprisingly, the
pluton seems to be providing a pathway for groundwater
to seep beneath Earth's crust into the upper mantle by
exacerbating the bending of Earth's crust.

Because the Kumano Pluton is so dense and rigid, it is
also likely playing a significant role in tectonic
activity.

Huge earthquakes with magnitudes higher than 8
originated on the flanks of the pluton in 1944 and
1946. Given that subducting slabs are highly sensitive
to variations in structure, the pluton is likely having
a profound effect on both the geometry and tectonic
activity in the region.

The team hopes that their discovery will prompt
thorough investigations into the subterranean
structures that might be hiding in other subduction
zones.

"The fact that we can make such a large discovery in an
area that is already well studied is, I think, eye
opening to what might await at places that are less
well monitored," says geophysicist Adrien Arnulf of the
University of Texas Institute for Geophysics.

The research has been published in Nature Geophysics.


Responses:
[95742]


95742


Date: March 12, 2022 at 14:43:18
From: chaskuchar@stcharlesmo, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Mountain-Sized Rock Hidden Underneath Japan Could Be a Magnet For...


thank you for interesting information.


Responses:
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