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Seismology s aɪ z ˈ m ɒ l ə dʒ i s aɪ s from Ancient Greek σεισμός seismós meaning earthquake and λογία logía meaning st

Seismology

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Seismology
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Seismology (/saɪzˈmɒlədʒi, saɪs-/; from Ancient Greek σεισμός (seismós) meaning "earthquake" and -λογία (-logía) meaning "study of") is the scientific study of earthquakes (or generally, quakes) and the generation and propagation of elastic waves through planetary bodies. It also includes studies of the environmental effects of earthquakes such as tsunamis; other seismic sources such as volcanoes, plate tectonics, glaciers, rivers, oceanic microseisms, and the atmosphere; and artificial processes such as explosions.

image
Animation of tsunami triggered by the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake

Paleoseismology is a related field that uses geology to infer information regarding past earthquakes. A recording of Earth's motion as a function of time, created by a seismograph is called a seismogram. A seismologist is a scientist who works in basic or applied seismology.

History

Scholarly interest in earthquakes can be traced back to antiquity. Early speculations on the natural causes of earthquakes were included in the writings of Thales of Miletus (c. 585 BCE), Anaximenes of Miletus (c. 550 BCE), Aristotle (c. 340 BCE), and Zhang Heng (132 CE).

In 132 CE, Zhang Heng of China's Han dynasty designed the first known seismoscope.

In the 17th century, Athanasius Kircher argued that earthquakes were caused by the movement of fire within a system of channels inside the Earth. Martin Lister (1638–1712) and Nicolas Lemery (1645–1715) proposed that earthquakes were caused by chemical explosions within the Earth.

The Lisbon earthquake of 1755, coinciding with the general flowering of science in Europe, set in motion intensified scientific attempts to understand the behaviour and causation of earthquakes. The earliest responses include work by John Bevis (1757) and John Michell (1761). Michell determined that earthquakes originate within the Earth and were waves of movement caused by "shifting masses of rock miles below the surface".

In response to a series of earthquakes near Comrie in Scotland in 1839, a committee was formed in the United Kingdom in order to produce better detection methods for earthquakes. The outcome of this was the production of one of the first modern seismometers by James David Forbes, first presented in a report by David Milne-Home in 1842. This seismometer was an inverted pendulum, which recorded the measurements of seismic activity through the use of a pencil placed on paper above the pendulum. The designs provided did not prove effective, according to Milne's reports.

From 1857, Robert Mallet laid the foundation of modern instrumental seismology and carried out seismological experiments using explosives. He is also responsible for coining the word "seismology." He is widely considered to be the "Father of Seismology".

In 1889 Ernst von Rebeur-Paschwitz recorded the first teleseismic earthquake signal (an earthquake in Japan recorded at Pottsdam Germany).

In 1897, Emil Wiechert's theoretical calculations led him to conclude that the Earth's interior consists of a mantle of silicates, surrounding a core of iron.

In 1906 Richard Dixon Oldham identified the separate arrival of P waves, S waves and surface waves on seismograms and found the first clear evidence that the Earth has a central core.

In 1909, Andrija Mohorovičić, one of the founders of modern seismology, discovered and defined the Mohorovičić discontinuity. Usually referred to as the "Moho discontinuity" or the "Moho," it is the boundary between the Earth's crust and the mantle. It is defined by the distinct change in velocity of seismological waves as they pass through changing densities of rock.

In 1910, after studying the April 1906 San Francisco earthquake, Harry Fielding Reid put forward the "elastic rebound theory" which remains the foundation for modern tectonic studies. The development of this theory depended on the considerable progress of earlier independent streams of work on the behavior of elastic materials and in mathematics.

An early scientific study of aftershocks from a destructive earthquake came after the January 1920 Xalapa earthquake. An 80 kg (180 lb) Wiechert seismograph was brought to the Mexican city of Xalapa by rail after the earthquake. The instrument was deployed to record its aftershocks. Data from the seismograph would eventually determine that the mainshock was produced along a shallow crustal fault.

In 1926, Harold Jeffreys was the first to claim, based on his study of earthquake waves, that below the mantle, the core of the Earth is liquid.

In 1937, Inge Lehmann determined that within Earth's liquid outer core there is a solid inner core.

In 1950, Michael S. Longuet-Higgins elucidated the ocean processes responsible for the global background seismic microseism.

By the 1960s, Earth science had developed to the point where a comprehensive theory of the causation of seismic events and geodetic motions had come together in the now well-established theory of plate tectonics.

Types of seismic wave

image
Seismogram records showing the three components of ground motion. The red line marks the first arrival of P waves; the green line, the later arrival of S waves.

Seismic waves are elastic waves that propagate in solid or fluid materials. They can be divided into body waves that travel through the interior of the materials; surface waves that travel along surfaces or interfaces between materials; and normal modes, a form of standing wave.

Body waves

There are two types of body waves, pressure waves or primary waves (P waves) and shear or secondary waves (S waves). P waves are longitudinal waves associated with compression and expansion, and involve particle motion parallel to the direction of wave propagation. P waves are always the first waves to appear on a seismogram as they are the waves that travel fastest through solids. S waves are transverse waves associated with shear, and involve particle motion perpendicular to the direction of wave propagation. S waves travel more slowly than P waves so they appear later than P waves on a seismogram. Because of their low shear strength, fluids cannot support transverse elastic waves, so S waves travel only in solids.

Surface waves

Surface waves are the result of P and S waves interacting with the surface of the Earth. These waves are dispersive, meaning that different frequencies have different velocities. The two main surface wave types are Rayleigh waves, which have both compressional and shear motions, and Love waves, which are purely shear. Rayleigh waves result from the interaction of P waves and vertically polarized S waves with the surface and can exist in any solid medium. Love waves are formed by horizontally polarized S waves interacting with the surface, and can only exist if there is a change in the elastic properties with depth in a solid medium, which is always the case in seismological applications. Surface waves travel more slowly than P waves and S waves because they are the result of these waves traveling along indirect paths to interact with Earth's surface. Because they travel along the surface of the Earth, their energy decays less rapidly than body waves (1/distance2 vs. 1/distance3), and thus the shaking caused by surface waves is generally stronger than that of body waves, and the primary surface waves are often thus the largest signals on earthquake seismograms. Surface waves are strongly excited when their source is close to the surface, as in a shallow earthquake or a near-surface explosion, and are much weaker for deep earthquake sources.

Normal modes

Both body and surface waves are traveling waves; however, large earthquakes can also make the entire Earth "ring" like a resonant bell. This ringing is a mixture of normal modes with discrete frequencies and periods of approximately an hour or shorter. Normal-mode motion caused by a very large earthquake can be observed for up to a month after the event. The first observations of normal modes were made in the 1960s as the advent of higher-fidelity instruments coincided with two of the largest earthquakes of the 20th century, the 1960 Valdivia earthquake and the 1964 Alaska earthquake. Since then, the normal modes of the Earth have given us some of the strongest constraints on the deep structure of the Earth.

Earthquakes

One of the first attempts at the scientific study of earthquakes followed the 1755 Lisbon earthquake. Other notable earthquakes that spurred major advancements in the science of seismology include the 1857 Basilicata earthquake, the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, the 1964 Alaska earthquake, the 2004 Sumatra-Andaman earthquake, and the 2011 Great East Japan earthquake.

Controlled seismic sources

Seismic waves produced by explosions or vibrating controlled sources are one of the primary methods of underground exploration in geophysics (in addition to many different electromagnetic methods such as induced polarization and magnetotellurics). Controlled-source seismology has been used to map salt domes, anticlines and other geologic traps in petroleum-bearing rocks, faults, rock types, and long-buried giant meteor craters. For example, the Chicxulub Crater, which was caused by an impact that has been implicated in the extinction of the dinosaurs, was localized to Central America by analyzing ejecta in the Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary, and then physically proven to exist using seismic maps from oil exploration.

Detection of seismic waves

image
Installation for a temporary seismic station, north Iceland highland.

Seismometers are sensors that detect and record the motion of the Earth arising from elastic waves. Seismometers may be deployed at the Earth's surface, in shallow vaults, in boreholes, or underwater. A complete instrument package that records seismic signals is called a seismograph. Networks of seismographs continuously record ground motions around the world to facilitate the monitoring and analysis of global earthquakes and other sources of seismic activity. Rapid location of earthquakes makes tsunami warnings possible because seismic waves travel considerably faster than tsunami waves.

Seismometers also record signals from non-earthquake sources ranging from explosions (nuclear and chemical), to local noise from wind or anthropogenic activities, to incessant signals generated at the ocean floor and coasts induced by ocean waves (the global microseism), to cryospheric events associated with large icebergs and glaciers. Above-ocean meteor strikes with energies as high as 4.2 × 1013J (equivalent to that released by an explosion of ten kilotons of TNT) have been recorded by seismographs, as have a number of industrial accidents and terrorist bombs and events (a field of study referred to as forensic seismology). A major long-term motivation for the global seismographic monitoring has been for the detection and study of nuclear testing.

Mapping Earth's interior

image
Seismic velocities and boundaries in the interior of the Earth sampled by seismic waves

Because seismic waves commonly propagate efficiently as they interact with the internal structure of the Earth, they provide high-resolution noninvasive methods for studying the planet's interior. One of the earliest important discoveries (suggested by Richard Dixon Oldham in 1906 and definitively shown by Harold Jeffreys in 1926) was that the outer core of the earth is liquid. Since S waves do not pass through liquids, the liquid core causes a "shadow" on the side of the planet opposite the earthquake where no direct S waves are observed. In addition, P waves travel much slower through the outer core than the mantle.

Processing readings from many seismometers using seismic tomography, seismologists have mapped the mantle of the earth to a resolution of several hundred kilometers. This has enabled scientists to identify convection cells and other large-scale features such as the large low-shear-velocity provinces near the core–mantle boundary.

Seismology and society

Earthquake prediction

Forecasting a probable timing, location, magnitude and other important features of a forthcoming seismic event is called earthquake prediction. Various attempts have been made by seismologists and others to create effective systems for precise earthquake predictions, including the VAN method. Most seismologists do not believe that a system to provide timely warnings for individual earthquakes has yet been developed, and many believe that such a system would be unlikely to give useful warning of impending seismic events. However, more general forecasts routinely predict seismic hazard. Such forecasts estimate the probability of an earthquake of a particular size affecting a particular location within a particular time-span, and they are routinely used in earthquake engineering.

Public controversy over earthquake prediction erupted after Italian authorities indicted six seismologists and one government official for manslaughter in connection with a magnitude 6.3 earthquake in L'Aquila, Italy on April 5, 2009. A report in Nature stated that the indictment was widely seen in Italy and abroad as being for failing to predict the earthquake and drew condemnation from the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Geophysical Union. However, the magazine also indicated that the population of Aquila do not consider the failure to predict the earthquake to be the reason for the indictment, but rather the alleged failure of the scientists to evaluate and communicate risk. The indictment claims that, at a special meeting in L'Aquila the week before the earthquake occurred, scientists and officials were more interested in pacifying the population than providing adequate information about earthquake risk and preparedness.

In locations where a historical record exists it may be used to estimate the timing, location and magnitude of future seismic events. There are several interpretative factors to consider. The epicentres or foci and magnitudes of historical earthquakes are subject to interpretation meaning it is possible that 5–6 Mw earthquakes described in the historical record could be larger events occurring elsewhere that were felt moderately in the populated areas that produced written records. Documentation in the historic period may be sparse or incomplete, and not give a full picture of the geographic scope of an earthquake, or the historical record may only have earthquake records spanning a few centuries, a very short time frame in a seismic cycle.

Engineering seismology

Engineering seismology is the study and application of seismology for engineering purposes. It generally applied to the branch of seismology that deals with the assessment of the seismic hazard of a site or region for the purposes of earthquake engineering. It is, therefore, a link between earth science and civil engineering. There are two principal components of engineering seismology. Firstly, studying earthquake history (e.g. historical and instrumental catalogs of seismicity) and tectonics to assess the earthquakes that could occur in a region and their characteristics and frequency of occurrence. Secondly, studying strong ground motions generated by earthquakes to assess the expected shaking from future earthquakes with similar characteristics. These strong ground motions could either be observations from accelerometers or seismometers or those simulated by computers using various techniques, which are then often used to develop ground-motion prediction equations (or ground-motion models)[1].

Tools

Seismological instruments can generate large amounts of data. Systems for processing such data include:

  • CUSP (Caltech-USGS Seismic Processing)
  • RadExPro seismic software
  • SeisComP3

Notable seismologists

  • Aki, Keiiti
  • Ambraseys, Nicholas
  • Anderson, Don L.
  • Bolt, Bruce
  • Beroza,Gregory
  • Claerbout, Jon
  • Dziewonski, Adam Marian
  • Ewing, Maurice
  • Galitzine, Boris Borisovich
  • Gamburtsev, Grigory A.
  • Gutenberg, Beno
  • Hough, Susan
  • Jeffreys, Harold
  • Jones, Lucy
  • Kanamori, Hiroo
  • Keilis-Borok, Vladimir
  • Knopoff, Leon
  • Lehmann, Inge
  • Macelwane, James
  • Mallet, Robert
  • Mercalli, Giuseppe
  • Milne, John
  • Mohorovičić, Andrija
  • Oldham, Richard Dixon
  • Omori, Fusakichi
  • Sebastião de Melo, Marquis of Pombal
  • Press, Frank
  • Rautian, Tatyana G.
  • Richards, Paul G.
  • Richter, Charles Francis
  • Sekiya, Seikei
  • Sieh, Kerry
  • Paul G. Silver
  • Stein, Ross
  • Tucker, Brian
  • Vidale, John
  • Wen, Lianxing
  • Winthrop, John
  • Zhang Heng

See also

  • imageGeophysics portal
  • imagePhysics portal
  • Asteroseismology – Study of oscillations in stars (starquakes)
  • Cryoseism – Non-tectonic seismic event
  • Earthquake swarm – Series of localized seismic events within a short time period
  • Engineering geology – Application of geology to engineering practice
  • Epicentral distance
  • Harmonic tremor – Sustained ground vibration associated with underground movement of magma or volcanic gas
  • Helioseismology – Study of the structure and dynamics of the Sun through its oscillation
  • IRIS Consortium – university research consortium dedicated to exploring the Earth's interior through the collection and distribution of seismographic dataPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback
  • Isoseismal map – Type of map used in seismology
  • Linear seismic inversion – Interpretation of seismic data using linear model
  • Lunar seismology – Study of ground motions of the Moon
  • Marsquake – Seismic event occurring on Mars
  • Quake (natural phenomenon) – Surface shaking on interstellar bodies in general
  • Seismic interferometry
  • Seismic loading – basic concept in earthquake engineeringPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback
  • Seismic migration – Measurement process
  • Seismic noise – Generic name for a relatively persistent vibration of the ground
  • Seismic performance analysis – Study of the response of buildings and structures to earthquakesPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets
  • Seismic velocity structure – Seismic wave velocity variation
  • Seismite – Sediment/structure shaken seismically
  • Seismo-electromagnetics – Electro-magnetic phenomena
  • Seismotectonics – study of how tectonic faults influence earthquakesPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback
  • Stabilized inverse Q filtering – Data processing technology

Notes

  1. Needham, Joseph (1959). Science and Civilization in China, Volume 3: Mathematics and the Sciences of the Heavens and the Earth. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 626–635. Bibcode:1959scc3.book.....N.
  2. Dewey, James; Byerly, Perry (February 1969). "The early history of seismometry (to 1900)". Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America. 59 (1): 183–227.
  3. Agnew, Duncan Carr (2002). "History of seismology". International Handbook of Earthquake and Engineering Seismology. International Geophysics. 81A: 3–11. Bibcode:2002InGeo..81....3A. doi:10.1016/S0074-6142(02)80203-0. ISBN 9780124406520.
  4. Udías, Agustín; Arroyo, Alfonso López (2008). "The Lisbon earthquake of 1755 in Spanish contemporary authors". In Mendes-Victor, Luiz A.; Oliveira, Carlos Sousa; Azevedo, João; Ribeiro, Antonio (eds.). The 1755 Lisbon earthquake: revisited. Springer. p. 14. ISBN 9781402086090.
  5. Member of the Royal Academy of Berlin (2012). The History and Philosophy of Earthquakes Accompanied by John Michell's 'conjectures Concerning the Cause, and Observations upon the Ph'nomena of Earthquakes'. Cambridge Univ Pr. ISBN 9781108059909.
  6. Oldroyd, David (2007). "The Study of Earthquakes in the Hundred Years Following Lisbon Earthquake of 1755". Researchgate. Earth sciences history: journal of the History of the Earth Sciences Society. Retrieved 4 October 2022.
  7. Society, The Royal (2005-01-22). "Robert Mallet and the 'Great Neapolitan earthquake' of 1857". Notes and Records. 59 (1): 45–64. doi:10.1098/rsnr.2004.0076. ISSN 0035-9149. S2CID 71003016.
  8. "Historical Seismograms from the Potsdam Station" (PDF). Academy of Sciences of German Democratic Republic, Central Institute for the Physics of the Earth. 1989. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  9. Barckhausen, Udo; Rudloff, Alexander (14 February 2012). "Earthquake on a stamp: Emil Wiechert honored". Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union. 93 (7): 67. Bibcode:2012EOSTr..93...67B. doi:10.1029/2012eo070002.
  10. "Oldham, Richard Dixon". Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography. Vol. 10. Charles Scribner's Sons. 2008. p. 203.
  11. "Andrya (Andrija) Mohorovicic". Penn State. Archived from the original on 26 June 2013. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  12. "Mohorovičić, Andrija". Encyclopedia.com. Archived from the original on 1 February 2021. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  13. "Andrija Mohorovičić (1857–1936) – On the occasion of the 150th anniversary of his birth". Seismological Society of America. Archived from the original on 1 February 2021. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  14. Andrew McLeish (1992). Geological science (2nd ed.). Thomas Nelson & Sons. p. 122. ISBN 978-0-17-448221-5.
  15. Rudnick, R. L.; Gao, S. (2003-01-01), Holland, Heinrich D.; Turekian, Karl K. (eds.), "3.01 – Composition of the Continental Crust", Treatise on Geochemistry, 3, Pergamon: 659, Bibcode:2003TrGeo...3....1R, doi:10.1016/b0-08-043751-6/03016-4, ISBN 978-0-08-043751-4, retrieved 2019-11-21
  16. "Reid's Elastic Rebound Theory". 1906 Earthquake. United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 6 April 2018.
  17. Suárez, G.; Novelo-Casanova, D. A. (2018). "A Pioneering Aftershock Study of the Destructive 4 January 1920 Jalapa, Mexico, Earthquake". Seismological Research Letters. 89 (5): 1894–1899. Bibcode:2018SeiRL..89.1894S. doi:10.1785/0220180150. S2CID 134449441.
  18. Jeffreys, Harold (1926-06-01). "On the Amplitudes of Bodily Seismic Waues". Geophysical Journal International. 1: 334–348. Bibcode:1926GeoJ....1..334J. doi:10.1111/j.1365-246X.1926.tb05381.x. ISSN 1365-246X.
  19. Hjortenberg, Eric (December 2009). "Inge Lehmann's work materials and seismological epistolary archive". Annals of Geophysics. 52 (6). doi:10.4401/ag-4625.
  20. Longuet-Higgins, M. S. (1950), "A theory of the origin of microseisms", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A, 243 (857): 1–35, Bibcode:1950RSPTA.243....1L, doi:10.1098/rsta.1950.0012, S2CID 31828394
  21. "History of plate tectonics". scecinfo.usc.edu. Retrieved 2024-02-20.
  22. Gubbins 1990
  23. Schulte et al. 2010
  24. Naderyan, Vahid; Hickey, Craig J.; Raspet, Richard (2016). "Wind-induced ground motion". Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth. 121 (2): 917–930. Bibcode:2016JGRB..121..917N. doi:10.1002/2015JB012478.
  25. Wen & Helmberger 1998
  26. Hall 2011
  27. Historical Seismology: Interdisciplinary Studies of Past and Recent Earthquakes(2008) Springer Netherlands
  28. Thakur, Prithvi; Huang, Yihe (2021). "Influence of Fault Zone Maturity on Fully Dynamic Earthquake Cycles". Geophysical Research Letters. 48 (17). Bibcode:2021GeoRL..4894679T. doi:10.1029/2021GL094679. hdl:2027.42/170290.
  29. Plimer, Richard C. SelleyL. Robin M. CocksIan R., ed. (2005-01-01). "Editors". Encyclopaedia of Geology. Oxford: Elsevier. pp. 499–515. doi:10.1016/b0-12-369396-9/90020-0. ISBN 978-0-12-369396-9.
  30. Ambraseys, N. N. (1988-12-01). "Engineering seismology: Part I". Earthquake Engineering & Structural Dynamics. 17 (1): 1–50. Bibcode:1988EESD...17....1A. doi:10.1002/eqe.4290170101. ISSN 1096-9845.
  31. Wiemer, Stefan (2001-05-01). "A Software Package to Analyze Seismicity: ZMAP". Seismological Research Letters. 72 (3): 373–382. Bibcode:2001SeiRL..72..373W. doi:10.1785/gssrl.72.3.373. ISSN 0895-0695.
  32. Bird, Peter; Liu, Zhen (2007-01-01). "Seismic Hazard Inferred from Tectonics: California". Seismological Research Letters. 78 (1): 37–48. Bibcode:2007SeiRL..78...37B. doi:10.1785/gssrl.78.1.37. ISSN 0895-0695.
  33. Douglas, John; Aochi, Hideo (2008-10-10). "A Survey of Techniques for Predicting Earthquake Ground Motions for Engineering Purposes" (PDF). Surveys in Geophysics. 29 (3): 187–220. Bibcode:2008SGeo...29..187D. doi:10.1007/s10712-008-9046-y. ISSN 0169-3298. S2CID 53066367.
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  35. Lee, W. H. K.; S. W. Stewart (1989). "Large-Scale Processing and Analysis of Digital Waveform Data from the USGS Central California Microearthquake Network". Observatory seismology: an anniversary symposium on the occasion of the centennial of the University of California at Berkeley seismographic stations. University of California Press. p. 86. ISBN 9780520065826. Retrieved 2011-10-12. The CUSP (Caltech-USGS Seismic Processing) System consists of on-line real-time earthquake waveform data acquisition routines, coupled with an off-line set of data reduction, timing, and archiving processes. It is a complete system for processing local earthquake data ...
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References

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  • Bath, M. (1979). Introduction to Seismology (2nd rev. ed.). Basel: Birkhäuser Basel. ISBN 9783034852838.
  • Davison, Charles (2014). The founders of seismology. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107691490.
  • Ewing, W. M.; Jardetzky, W. S.; Press, F. (1957). Elastic Waves in Layered Media. McGraw-Hill Book Company.
  • Gubbins, David (1990). Seismology and Plate Tectonics. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-37141-4.
  • Hall, Stephen S. (2011). "Scientists on trial: At fault?". Nature. 477 (7364): 264–269. Bibcode:2011Natur.477..264H. doi:10.1038/477264a. PMID 21921895. S2CID 205067216.
  • Kanamori, Hiroo (2003). Earthquake prediction: An overview (PDF). International Handbook of Earthquake and Engineering Seismology. Vol. 81B. International Association of Seismology & Physics of the Earth's Interior. pp. 1205–1216. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-10-24.
  • Lay, Thorne, ed. (2009). Seismological Grand Challenges in Understanding Earth's Dynamic Systems (PDF). Report to the National Science Foundation, IRIS consortium.
  • Schulte, Peter; Laia Alegret; Ignacio Arenillas; José A. Arz; Penny J. Barton; Paul R. Bown; Timothy J. Bralower; Gail L. Christeson; Philippe Claeys; Charles S. Cockell; Gareth S. Collins; Alexander Deutsch; Tamara J. Goldin; Kazuhisa Goto; José M. Grajales-Nishimura; Richard A. F. Grieve; Sean P. S. Gulick; Kirk R. Johnson; Wolfgang Kiessling; Christian Koeberl; David A. Kring; Kenneth G. MacLeod; Takafumi Matsui; Jay Melosh; Alessandro Montanari; Joanna V. Morgan; Clive R. Neal; Douglas J. Nichols; Richard D. Norris; Elisabetta Pierazzo; Greg Ravizza; Mario Rebolledo-Vieyra; Wolf Uwe Reimold; Eric Robin; Tobias Salge; Robert P. Speijer; Arthur R. Sweet; Jaime Urrutia-Fucugauchi; Vivi Vajda; Michael T. Whalen; Pi S. Willumsen (5 March 2010). "The Chicxulub Asteroid Impact and Mass Extinction at the Cretaceous-Paleogene Boundary". Science. 327 (5970): 1214–1218. Bibcode:2010Sci...327.1214S. doi:10.1126/science.1177265. ISSN 1095-9203. PMID 20203042. S2CID 2659741. Retrieved 5 March 2010.
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External links

image
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Seismology.
  • European-Mediterranean Seismological Center, real-time earthquake information website.
  • Seismological Society of America.
  • Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology.
  • USGS Earthquake Hazards Program.
  • A brief history of seismology to 1910 (UCSB ERI)

Author: www.NiNa.Az

Publication date: May 25, 2025 / 08:43

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Seismology s aɪ z ˈ m ɒ l e dʒ i s aɪ s from Ancient Greek seismos seismos meaning earthquake and logia logia meaning study of is the scientific study of earthquakes or generally quakes and the generation and propagation of elastic waves through planetary bodies It also includes studies of the environmental effects of earthquakes such as tsunamis other seismic sources such as volcanoes plate tectonics glaciers rivers oceanic microseisms and the atmosphere and artificial processes such as explosions Animation of tsunami triggered by the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake Paleoseismology is a related field that uses geology to infer information regarding past earthquakes A recording of Earth s motion as a function of time created by a seismograph is called a seismogram A seismologist is a scientist who works in basic or applied seismology HistoryScholarly interest in earthquakes can be traced back to antiquity Early speculations on the natural causes of earthquakes were included in the writings of Thales of Miletus c 585 BCE Anaximenes of Miletus c 550 BCE Aristotle c 340 BCE and Zhang Heng 132 CE In 132 CE Zhang Heng of China s Han dynasty designed the first known seismoscope In the 17th century Athanasius Kircher argued that earthquakes were caused by the movement of fire within a system of channels inside the Earth Martin Lister 1638 1712 and Nicolas Lemery 1645 1715 proposed that earthquakes were caused by chemical explosions within the Earth The Lisbon earthquake of 1755 coinciding with the general flowering of science in Europe set in motion intensified scientific attempts to understand the behaviour and causation of earthquakes The earliest responses include work by John Bevis 1757 and John Michell 1761 Michell determined that earthquakes originate within the Earth and were waves of movement caused by shifting masses of rock miles below the surface In response to a series of earthquakes near Comrie in Scotland in 1839 a committee was formed in the United Kingdom in order to produce better detection methods for earthquakes The outcome of this was the production of one of the first modern seismometers by James David Forbes first presented in a report by David Milne Home in 1842 This seismometer was an inverted pendulum which recorded the measurements of seismic activity through the use of a pencil placed on paper above the pendulum The designs provided did not prove effective according to Milne s reports From 1857 Robert Mallet laid the foundation of modern instrumental seismology and carried out seismological experiments using explosives He is also responsible for coining the word seismology He is widely considered to be the Father of Seismology In 1889 Ernst von Rebeur Paschwitz recorded the first teleseismic earthquake signal an earthquake in Japan recorded at Pottsdam Germany In 1897 Emil Wiechert s theoretical calculations led him to conclude that the Earth s interior consists of a mantle of silicates surrounding a core of iron In 1906 Richard Dixon Oldham identified the separate arrival of P waves S waves and surface waves on seismograms and found the first clear evidence that the Earth has a central core In 1909 Andrija Mohorovicic one of the founders of modern seismology discovered and defined the Mohorovicic discontinuity Usually referred to as the Moho discontinuity or the Moho it is the boundary between the Earth s crust and the mantle It is defined by the distinct change in velocity of seismological waves as they pass through changing densities of rock In 1910 after studying the April 1906 San Francisco earthquake Harry Fielding Reid put forward the elastic rebound theory which remains the foundation for modern tectonic studies The development of this theory depended on the considerable progress of earlier independent streams of work on the behavior of elastic materials and in mathematics An early scientific study of aftershocks from a destructive earthquake came after the January 1920 Xalapa earthquake An 80 kg 180 lb Wiechert seismograph was brought to the Mexican city of Xalapa by rail after the earthquake The instrument was deployed to record its aftershocks Data from the seismograph would eventually determine that the mainshock was produced along a shallow crustal fault In 1926 Harold Jeffreys was the first to claim based on his study of earthquake waves that below the mantle the core of the Earth is liquid In 1937 Inge Lehmann determined that within Earth s liquid outer core there is a solid inner core In 1950 Michael S Longuet Higgins elucidated the ocean processes responsible for the global background seismic microseism By the 1960s Earth science had developed to the point where a comprehensive theory of the causation of seismic events and geodetic motions had come together in the now well established theory of plate tectonics Types of seismic waveSeismogram records showing the three components of ground motion The red line marks the first arrival of P waves the green line the later arrival of S waves Seismic waves are elastic waves that propagate in solid or fluid materials They can be divided into body waves that travel through the interior of the materials surface waves that travel along surfaces or interfaces between materials and normal modes a form of standing wave Body waves There are two types of body waves pressure waves or primary waves P waves and shear or secondary waves S waves P waves are longitudinal waves associated with compression and expansion and involve particle motion parallel to the direction of wave propagation P waves are always the first waves to appear on a seismogram as they are the waves that travel fastest through solids S waves are transverse waves associated with shear and involve particle motion perpendicular to the direction of wave propagation S waves travel more slowly than P waves so they appear later than P waves on a seismogram Because of their low shear strength fluids cannot support transverse elastic waves so S waves travel only in solids Surface waves Surface waves are the result of P and S waves interacting with the surface of the Earth These waves are dispersive meaning that different frequencies have different velocities The two main surface wave types are Rayleigh waves which have both compressional and shear motions and Love waves which are purely shear Rayleigh waves result from the interaction of P waves and vertically polarized S waves with the surface and can exist in any solid medium Love waves are formed by horizontally polarized S waves interacting with the surface and can only exist if there is a change in the elastic properties with depth in a solid medium which is always the case in seismological applications Surface waves travel more slowly than P waves and S waves because they are the result of these waves traveling along indirect paths to interact with Earth s surface Because they travel along the surface of the Earth their energy decays less rapidly than body waves 1 distance2 vs 1 distance3 and thus the shaking caused by surface waves is generally stronger than that of body waves and the primary surface waves are often thus the largest signals on earthquake seismograms Surface waves are strongly excited when their source is close to the surface as in a shallow earthquake or a near surface explosion and are much weaker for deep earthquake sources Normal modes Both body and surface waves are traveling waves however large earthquakes can also make the entire Earth ring like a resonant bell This ringing is a mixture of normal modes with discrete frequencies and periods of approximately an hour or shorter Normal mode motion caused by a very large earthquake can be observed for up to a month after the event The first observations of normal modes were made in the 1960s as the advent of higher fidelity instruments coincided with two of the largest earthquakes of the 20th century the 1960 Valdivia earthquake and the 1964 Alaska earthquake Since then the normal modes of the Earth have given us some of the strongest constraints on the deep structure of the Earth EarthquakesOne of the first attempts at the scientific study of earthquakes followed the 1755 Lisbon earthquake Other notable earthquakes that spurred major advancements in the science of seismology include the 1857 Basilicata earthquake the 1906 San Francisco earthquake the 1964 Alaska earthquake the 2004 Sumatra Andaman earthquake and the 2011 Great East Japan earthquake Controlled seismic sourcesSeismic waves produced by explosions or vibrating controlled sources are one of the primary methods of underground exploration in geophysics in addition to many different electromagnetic methods such as induced polarization and magnetotellurics Controlled source seismology has been used to map salt domes anticlines and other geologic traps in petroleum bearing rocks faults rock types and long buried giant meteor craters For example the Chicxulub Crater which was caused by an impact that has been implicated in the extinction of the dinosaurs was localized to Central America by analyzing ejecta in the Cretaceous Paleogene boundary and then physically proven to exist using seismic maps from oil exploration Detection of seismic wavesInstallation for a temporary seismic station north Iceland highland Seismometers are sensors that detect and record the motion of the Earth arising from elastic waves Seismometers may be deployed at the Earth s surface in shallow vaults in boreholes or underwater A complete instrument package that records seismic signals is called a seismograph Networks of seismographs continuously record ground motions around the world to facilitate the monitoring and analysis of global earthquakes and other sources of seismic activity Rapid location of earthquakes makes tsunami warnings possible because seismic waves travel considerably faster than tsunami waves Seismometers also record signals from non earthquake sources ranging from explosions nuclear and chemical to local noise from wind or anthropogenic activities to incessant signals generated at the ocean floor and coasts induced by ocean waves the global microseism to cryospheric events associated with large icebergs and glaciers Above ocean meteor strikes with energies as high as 4 2 1013J equivalent to that released by an explosion of ten kilotons of TNT have been recorded by seismographs as have a number of industrial accidents and terrorist bombs and events a field of study referred to as forensic seismology A major long term motivation for the global seismographic monitoring has been for the detection and study of nuclear testing Mapping Earth s interiorSeismic velocities and boundaries in the interior of the Earth sampled by seismic waves Because seismic waves commonly propagate efficiently as they interact with the internal structure of the Earth they provide high resolution noninvasive methods for studying the planet s interior One of the earliest important discoveries suggested by Richard Dixon Oldham in 1906 and definitively shown by Harold Jeffreys in 1926 was that the outer core of the earth is liquid Since S waves do not pass through liquids the liquid core causes a shadow on the side of the planet opposite the earthquake where no direct S waves are observed In addition P waves travel much slower through the outer core than the mantle Processing readings from many seismometers using seismic tomography seismologists have mapped the mantle of the earth to a resolution of several hundred kilometers This has enabled scientists to identify convection cells and other large scale features such as the large low shear velocity provinces near the core mantle boundary Seismology and societyEarthquake prediction Forecasting a probable timing location magnitude and other important features of a forthcoming seismic event is called earthquake prediction Various attempts have been made by seismologists and others to create effective systems for precise earthquake predictions including the VAN method Most seismologists do not believe that a system to provide timely warnings for individual earthquakes has yet been developed and many believe that such a system would be unlikely to give useful warning of impending seismic events However more general forecasts routinely predict seismic hazard Such forecasts estimate the probability of an earthquake of a particular size affecting a particular location within a particular time span and they are routinely used in earthquake engineering Public controversy over earthquake prediction erupted after Italian authorities indicted six seismologists and one government official for manslaughter in connection with a magnitude 6 3 earthquake in L Aquila Italy on April 5 2009 A report in Nature stated that the indictment was widely seen in Italy and abroad as being for failing to predict the earthquake and drew condemnation from the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Geophysical Union However the magazine also indicated that the population of Aquila do not consider the failure to predict the earthquake to be the reason for the indictment but rather the alleged failure of the scientists to evaluate and communicate risk The indictment claims that at a special meeting in L Aquila the week before the earthquake occurred scientists and officials were more interested in pacifying the population than providing adequate information about earthquake risk and preparedness In locations where a historical record exists it may be used to estimate the timing location and magnitude of future seismic events There are several interpretative factors to consider The epicentres or foci and magnitudes of historical earthquakes are subject to interpretation meaning it is possible that 5 6 Mw earthquakes described in the historical record could be larger events occurring elsewhere that were felt moderately in the populated areas that produced written records Documentation in the historic period may be sparse or incomplete and not give a full picture of the geographic scope of an earthquake or the historical record may only have earthquake records spanning a few centuries a very short time frame in a seismic cycle Engineering seismology Engineering seismology is the study and application of seismology for engineering purposes It generally applied to the branch of seismology that deals with the assessment of the seismic hazard of a site or region for the purposes of earthquake engineering It is therefore a link between earth science and civil engineering There are two principal components of engineering seismology Firstly studying earthquake history e g historical and instrumental catalogs of seismicity and tectonics to assess the earthquakes that could occur in a region and their characteristics and frequency of occurrence Secondly studying strong ground motions generated by earthquakes to assess the expected shaking from future earthquakes with similar characteristics These strong ground motions could either be observations from accelerometers or seismometers or those simulated by computers using various techniques which are then often used to develop ground motion prediction equations or ground motion models 1 ToolsSeismological instruments can generate large amounts of data Systems for processing such data include CUSP Caltech USGS Seismic Processing RadExPro seismic software SeisComP3Notable seismologistsAki Keiiti Ambraseys Nicholas Anderson Don L Bolt Bruce Beroza Gregory Claerbout Jon Dziewonski Adam Marian Ewing Maurice Galitzine Boris Borisovich Gamburtsev Grigory A Gutenberg Beno Hough Susan Jeffreys Harold Jones Lucy Kanamori Hiroo Keilis Borok Vladimir Knopoff Leon Lehmann Inge Macelwane James Mallet Robert Mercalli Giuseppe Milne John Mohorovicic Andrija Oldham Richard Dixon Omori Fusakichi Sebastiao de Melo Marquis of Pombal Press Frank Rautian Tatyana G Richards Paul G Richter Charles Francis Sekiya Seikei Sieh Kerry Paul G Silver Stein Ross Tucker Brian Vidale John Wen Lianxing Winthrop John Zhang HengSee alsoGeophysics portalPhysics portal Asteroseismology Study of oscillations in stars starquakes Cryoseism Non tectonic seismic event Earthquake swarm Series of localized seismic events within a short time period Engineering geology Application of geology to engineering practice Epicentral distance Harmonic tremor Sustained ground vibration associated with underground movement of magma or volcanic gas Helioseismology Study of the structure and dynamics of the Sun through its oscillation IRIS Consortium university research consortium dedicated to exploring the Earth s interior through the collection and distribution of seismographic dataPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Isoseismal map Type of map used in seismology Linear seismic inversion Interpretation of seismic data using linear model Lunar seismology Study of ground motions of the Moon Marsquake Seismic event occurring on Mars Quake natural phenomenon Surface shaking on interstellar bodies in general Seismic interferometry Seismic loading basic concept in earthquake engineeringPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Seismic migration Measurement process Seismic noise Generic name for a relatively persistent vibration of the ground Seismic performance analysis Study of the response of buildings and structures to earthquakesPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Seismic velocity structure Seismic wave velocity variation Seismite Sediment structure shaken seismically Seismo electromagnetics Electro magnetic phenomena Seismotectonics study of how tectonic faults influence earthquakesPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Stabilized inverse Q filtering Data processing technologyNotesNeedham Joseph 1959 Science and Civilization in China Volume 3 Mathematics and the Sciences of the Heavens and the Earth Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 626 635 Bibcode 1959scc3 book N Dewey James Byerly Perry February 1969 The early history of seismometry to 1900 Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 59 1 183 227 Agnew Duncan Carr 2002 History of seismology International Handbook of Earthquake and Engineering Seismology International Geophysics 81A 3 11 Bibcode 2002InGeo 81 3A doi 10 1016 S0074 6142 02 80203 0 ISBN 9780124406520 Udias Agustin Arroyo Alfonso Lopez 2008 The Lisbon earthquake of 1755 in Spanish contemporary authors In Mendes Victor Luiz A Oliveira Carlos Sousa Azevedo Joao Ribeiro Antonio eds The 1755 Lisbon earthquake revisited Springer p 14 ISBN 9781402086090 Member of the Royal Academy of Berlin 2012 The History and Philosophy of Earthquakes Accompanied by John Michell s conjectures Concerning the Cause and Observations upon the Ph nomena of Earthquakes Cambridge Univ Pr ISBN 9781108059909 Oldroyd David 2007 The Study of Earthquakes in the Hundred Years Following Lisbon Earthquake of 1755 Researchgate Earth sciences history journal of the History of the Earth Sciences Society Retrieved 4 October 2022 Society The Royal 2005 01 22 Robert Mallet and the Great Neapolitan earthquake of 1857 Notes and Records 59 1 45 64 doi 10 1098 rsnr 2004 0076 ISSN 0035 9149 S2CID 71003016 Historical Seismograms from the Potsdam Station PDF Academy of Sciences of German Democratic Republic Central Institute for the Physics of the Earth 1989 Retrieved April 7 2020 Barckhausen Udo Rudloff Alexander 14 February 2012 Earthquake on a stamp Emil Wiechert honored Eos Transactions American Geophysical Union 93 7 67 Bibcode 2012EOSTr 93 67B doi 10 1029 2012eo070002 Oldham Richard Dixon Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography Vol 10 Charles Scribner s Sons 2008 p 203 Andrya Andrija Mohorovicic Penn State Archived from the original on 26 June 2013 Retrieved 30 January 2021 Mohorovicic Andrija Encyclopedia com Archived from the original on 1 February 2021 Retrieved 30 January 2021 Andrija Mohorovicic 1857 1936 On the occasion of the 150th anniversary of his birth Seismological Society of America Archived from the original on 1 February 2021 Retrieved 30 January 2021 Andrew McLeish 1992 Geological science 2nd ed Thomas Nelson amp Sons p 122 ISBN 978 0 17 448221 5 Rudnick R L Gao S 2003 01 01 Holland Heinrich D Turekian Karl K eds 3 01 Composition of the Continental Crust Treatise on Geochemistry 3 Pergamon 659 Bibcode 2003TrGeo 3 1R doi 10 1016 b0 08 043751 6 03016 4 ISBN 978 0 08 043751 4 retrieved 2019 11 21 Reid s Elastic Rebound Theory 1906 Earthquake United States Geological Survey Retrieved 6 April 2018 Suarez G Novelo Casanova D A 2018 A Pioneering Aftershock Study of the Destructive 4 January 1920 Jalapa Mexico Earthquake Seismological Research Letters 89 5 1894 1899 Bibcode 2018SeiRL 89 1894S doi 10 1785 0220180150 S2CID 134449441 Jeffreys Harold 1926 06 01 On the Amplitudes of Bodily Seismic Waues Geophysical Journal International 1 334 348 Bibcode 1926GeoJ 1 334J doi 10 1111 j 1365 246X 1926 tb05381 x ISSN 1365 246X Hjortenberg Eric December 2009 Inge Lehmann s work materials and seismological epistolary archive Annals of Geophysics 52 6 doi 10 4401 ag 4625 Longuet Higgins M S 1950 A theory of the origin of microseisms Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A 243 857 1 35 Bibcode 1950RSPTA 243 1L doi 10 1098 rsta 1950 0012 S2CID 31828394 History of plate tectonics scecinfo usc edu Retrieved 2024 02 20 Gubbins 1990 Schulte et al 2010 Naderyan Vahid Hickey Craig J Raspet Richard 2016 Wind induced ground motion Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth 121 2 917 930 Bibcode 2016JGRB 121 917N doi 10 1002 2015JB012478 Wen amp Helmberger 1998 Hall 2011 Historical Seismology Interdisciplinary Studies of Past and Recent Earthquakes 2008 Springer Netherlands Thakur Prithvi Huang Yihe 2021 Influence of Fault Zone Maturity on Fully Dynamic Earthquake Cycles Geophysical Research Letters 48 17 Bibcode 2021GeoRL 4894679T doi 10 1029 2021GL094679 hdl 2027 42 170290 Plimer Richard C SelleyL Robin M CocksIan R ed 2005 01 01 Editors Encyclopaedia of Geology Oxford Elsevier pp 499 515 doi 10 1016 b0 12 369396 9 90020 0 ISBN 978 0 12 369396 9 Ambraseys N N 1988 12 01 Engineering seismology Part I Earthquake Engineering amp Structural Dynamics 17 1 1 50 Bibcode 1988EESD 17 1A doi 10 1002 eqe 4290170101 ISSN 1096 9845 Wiemer Stefan 2001 05 01 A Software Package to Analyze Seismicity ZMAP Seismological Research Letters 72 3 373 382 Bibcode 2001SeiRL 72 373W doi 10 1785 gssrl 72 3 373 ISSN 0895 0695 Bird Peter Liu Zhen 2007 01 01 Seismic Hazard Inferred from Tectonics California Seismological Research Letters 78 1 37 48 Bibcode 2007SeiRL 78 37B doi 10 1785 gssrl 78 1 37 ISSN 0895 0695 Douglas John Aochi Hideo 2008 10 10 A Survey of Techniques for Predicting Earthquake Ground Motions for Engineering Purposes PDF Surveys in Geophysics 29 3 187 220 Bibcode 2008SGeo 29 187D doi 10 1007 s10712 008 9046 y ISSN 0169 3298 S2CID 53066367 Douglas John Edwards Benjamin 2016 09 01 Recent and future developments in earthquake ground motion estimation PDF Earth Science Reviews 160 203 219 Bibcode 2016ESRv 160 203D doi 10 1016 j earscirev 2016 07 005 Lee W H K S W Stewart 1989 Large Scale Processing and Analysis of Digital Waveform Data from the USGS Central California Microearthquake Network Observatory seismology an anniversary symposium on the occasion of the centennial of the University of California at Berkeley seismographic stations University of California Press p 86 ISBN 9780520065826 Retrieved 2011 10 12 The CUSP Caltech USGS Seismic Processing System consists of on line real time earthquake waveform data acquisition routines coupled with an off line set of data reduction timing and archiving processes It is a complete system for processing local earthquake data Akkar Sinan Polat Gulkan van Eck Torild eds 2010 Earthquake Data in Engineering Seismology Predictive Models Data Management and Networks Geotechnical Geological and Earthquake Engineering Vol 14 Springer p 194 ISBN 978 94 007 0151 9 Retrieved 2011 10 19 ReferencesAllaby Ailsa Allaby Michael eds 2003 Oxford Dictionary of Earth Sciences 2nd ed Oxford University Press Ben Menahem Ari 1995 A Concise History of Mainstream Seismology Origins Legacy and Perspectives PDF Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 85 4 1202 1225 Bath M 1979 Introduction to Seismology 2nd rev ed Basel Birkhauser Basel ISBN 9783034852838 Davison Charles 2014 The founders of seismology Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107691490 Ewing W M Jardetzky W S Press F 1957 Elastic Waves in Layered Media McGraw Hill Book Company Gubbins David 1990 Seismology and Plate Tectonics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 37141 4 Hall Stephen S 2011 Scientists on trial At fault Nature 477 7364 264 269 Bibcode 2011Natur 477 264H doi 10 1038 477264a PMID 21921895 S2CID 205067216 Kanamori Hiroo 2003 Earthquake prediction An overview PDF International Handbook of Earthquake and Engineering Seismology Vol 81B International Association of Seismology amp Physics of the Earth s Interior pp 1205 1216 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 10 24 Lay Thorne ed 2009 Seismological Grand Challenges in Understanding Earth s Dynamic Systems PDF Report to the National Science Foundation IRIS consortium Schulte Peter Laia Alegret Ignacio Arenillas Jose A Arz Penny J Barton Paul R Bown Timothy J Bralower Gail L Christeson Philippe Claeys Charles S Cockell Gareth S Collins Alexander Deutsch Tamara J Goldin Kazuhisa Goto Jose M Grajales Nishimura Richard A F Grieve Sean P S Gulick Kirk R Johnson Wolfgang Kiessling Christian Koeberl David A Kring Kenneth G MacLeod Takafumi Matsui Jay Melosh Alessandro Montanari Joanna V Morgan Clive R Neal Douglas J Nichols Richard D Norris Elisabetta Pierazzo Greg Ravizza Mario Rebolledo Vieyra Wolf Uwe Reimold Eric Robin Tobias Salge Robert P Speijer Arthur R Sweet Jaime Urrutia Fucugauchi Vivi Vajda Michael T Whalen Pi S Willumsen 5 March 2010 The Chicxulub Asteroid Impact and Mass Extinction at the Cretaceous Paleogene Boundary Science 327 5970 1214 1218 Bibcode 2010Sci 327 1214S doi 10 1126 science 1177265 ISSN 1095 9203 PMID 20203042 S2CID 2659741 Retrieved 5 March 2010 Shearer Peter M 2009 Introduction to Seismology 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 70842 5 Stein Seth Wysession Michael 2002 An Introduction to Seismology Earthquakes and Earth Structure Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 0 86542 078 6 Wen Lianxing Helmberger Donald V 1998 Ultra Low Velocity Zones Near the Core Mantle Boundary from Broadband PKP Precursors PDF Science 279 5357 1701 1703 Bibcode 1998Sci 279 1701W doi 10 1126 science 279 5357 1701 PMID 9497284 External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Seismology European Mediterranean Seismological Center real time earthquake information website Seismological Society of America Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology USGS Earthquake Hazards Program A brief history of seismology to 1910 UCSB ERI

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