*Source:* Oregon State University <http://www.orst.edu/>  *Date:* May 1,
2007  *Keywords:*
Earthquakes<http://www.sciencedaily.com/news/earth_climate/earthquakes/>,
Natural 
Disasters<http://www.sciencedaily.com/news/earth_climate/natural_disasters/>,
Tsunamis <http://www.sciencedaily.com/news/earth_climate/tsunamis/>,
Oceanography <http://www.sciencedaily.com/news/earth_climate/oceanography/>,
Geography <http://www.sciencedaily.com/news/earth_climate/geography/>, Earth
Science <http://www.sciencedaily.com/news/earth_climate/earth_science/>
 Analyzing Major Indonesian Earthquakes

*Science Daily <http://www.sciencedaily.com/> —* Researchers from Oregon
State University and an Indonesian science center are collaborating on a
pioneering project to analyze the history of great earthquakes and tsunamis
on the Sunda subduction zone, along the western margin of Sumatra and Java
-- site of one of the most devastating tsunamis in modern history.

Led by OSU marine geologist Chris Goldfinger, the expedition will travel
this May to the site of a 2004 Indonesian earthquake and its resulting
tsunamis, which devastated nearby Banda Aceh and other coastal cities in the
Indian Ocean. They also will visit the site of a second major earthquake
that struck west of nearby Nias Island in 2005.

The 43-day research project is funded by the National Science Foundation. It
is based on an agreement and collaborative research plan recently developed
by Goldfinger and Yusuf S. Djadjadihardja, an official with the Agency for
Assessment of Application of Technology in Indonesia.

The project "continues the important cooperation between Indonesia and the
United States on potential tsunami and earthquake related natural disasters"
that was embodied in a previous hazards research agreement, said John
Heffern, United States Embassy Charge d'Affaires.

This will be the first research ship from the United States allowed in
Indonesian waters in nearly 30 years, said Goldfinger, a professor in OSU's
College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences. The researchers will take a
series of piston core samples from aboard the R/V Roger Revelle, operated by
the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. The 32-member scientific team will
include at least eight scientists from Indonesia, who will collaborate
closely on the analysis of the findings from the cruise.

"The region has had many, many earthquakes in its past, yet we know very
little about its seismic history because of its remoteness and access
issues," said Goldfinger, one of the world's leading experts on subduction
zone earthquakes. "Historical records indicate that there were major
earthquakes in Padang in 1797 and 1833 in addition to the two more recent
quakes, but the evidence beyond that is a little spotty."

The researchers will leave Phuket, Thailand, on May 7 and cruise to an area
in the Indian Ocean west of Banda Aceh, which is on the northern tip of
Sumatra, the largest island in Indonesia. From there, they will begin taking
a series of core samples -- about five to six meters in length -- from the
seafloor, which is about 4,000 to 6,000 meters below the surface.

They will collect roughly 50 core samples from the ocean along the west
coast of Sumatra. From those cores, they will be looking for coarse
sediments called "turbidites" that provide evidence of past earthquakes.

When a major offshore earthquake occurs, Goldfinger says, the disturbance
causes mud and sand to begin streaming down the continental margins and into
the undersea canyons. Sediments run out onto the abyssal plain. The coarser
turbidites stand out distinctly from the fine particulate matter that
accumulates on a regular basis between major tectonic events.

By dating the fine particles through carbon-14 analysis and other methods,
they can estimate with a great deal of accuracy when major earthquakes have
occurred.

Goldfinger has used the technique to recreate the seismic history of the
Cascadia Subduction Zone off the coast of the Pacific Northwest, where he
has documented 34 major earthquakes during the past 10,000 years. At least
19 of those quakes, he says, ruptured along the entire length of the
subduction zone -- requiring an event of magnitude 8.5 or larger.

Going back further than 10,000 years has been difficult in the Cascadia
Subduction Zone because the sea level used to be lower and West Coast rivers
emptied directly into offshore canyons, Goldfinger pointed out. Because of
that, it was difficult to distinguish between storms debris and earthquake
turbidites.

"We hope to create the same kind of history for the Indian Ocean region,
which is surprisingly similar to the Cascadia Subduction Zone in structure,"
Goldfinger said. "If anything, the Indian Ocean is even better suited for
this analysis because there is a huge basin between the rivers and the deep
ocean that keeps the terrestrial sediments close to land."

The researchers will further hone in on the dates of the deposits by
studying the fossil record and variations in magnetic north that are
recorded in the sediments.

On Dec. 26, 2004, a massive undersea earthquake centered west of Sumatra
shook the entire region, generating a series of tsunamis that swamped
low-lying coastal areas. Nearly 230,000 persons were killed or are still
missing -- one of the most devastating natural disasters in history. The
earthquake's magnitude was estimated between 9.1 and 9.3.

In March of 2005, a magnitude 8.7 quake struck an area just to the south,
killing an estimated 1,300 people -- most on the Indonesian island of Nias.
Scientists are unsure whether the second quake was an aftershock or took
place because the entire fault has been weakened.

"That's why it is so important to gather the seismic history of the region,"
Goldfinger said.

Eight researchers from OSU -- including faculty, technicians and graduate
students -- will join colleagues from Indonesia as well as researchers from
Germany and Japan on the study.

*Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by Oregon
State University.*


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