Dalam perjalanan panjang umur geologi, naik turunnya aktifitas apa
saja di bumi ini sudah biasa. Ada siklus, ada masa aktif, pasif.
Secara intutif geologist semestinya mudah menerimanya.  Sayangnya
rekaman gempa scr detil baru ada sejak 60 tahun lalu. Atau sejak
ditemukan seismometer.
Tantangan memanfaatkan data sekejap utk mengaplikasikan gejala jutaan
tahun lalu.

Selamat hari bumi 22 april.

Rdp
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Are we entering an age of major earthquakes?

A study of more than a century of global seismic records has prompted
some scientists to say that major earthquakes have tended to occur in
clusters. Others disagree.

By Charles Q. Choi, OurAmazingPlanet Contributor / April 20, 2011

A number of devastating quakes have struck across the globe in recent
years --- from Japan to Chile to Haiti --- sparking fears that our
planet is due to experience even more catastrophic temblors in the near
future.

Three research teams have now combed through 110 years' worth of global
seismic records to see if we might be caught in a global trend of giant
earthquakes.

Some say we are; others disagree.

Megaquake clusters

One pair of researchers found clusters of what they called "megaquakes,"
earthquakes of magnitude 9.0 or greater.

One cluster involved three such quakes between 1952 and 1964, including
the magnitude 9.5 Chile quake of 1960, the largest earthquake ever
recorded on Earth. Another, larger, cluster of magnitude 8.6 and higher
temblors happened between 1950 to 1965, said Charles Bufe and David
Perkins, seismologists with the U.S. Geological Survey in Golden, Colo.
They speculate that the magnitude 8.4 Peru quake in 2001 could mark the
beginning of a new global sequence of major quakes that we are currently
experiencing.

"This isn't doomsday --- I don't think large earthquakes will occur over
a long period of time --- but we're saying there seems to be a cluster
right now with a higher than normal probability for large quakes,"
Bufe told OurAmazingPlanet. "I don't know how long this cluster might
last
--- if we don't get another large earthquake in maybe the next 10 or
12 years, I would say we're probably out of the cluster."

Bufe suggested that by sending seismic waves traveling around and
around the planet's surface, very large earthquakes might weaken fault
zones that are already very close to failure. "I think there's a more
than 50 percent chance we'll see another magnitude 9 quake sometime in
the next
decade or so," he said.

Just chance?

On the other hand, this apparent recent spike in large quakes could
just reflect random fluctuations in global patterns of seismic
activity. A statistical study from U.S. Geological Survey researcher
Andrew Michael at Menlo Park, Calif., suggests this seeming cluster
pattern disappeared once local aftershocks of the large earthquakes
are taken into account.

"The most important lesson is that random doesn't mean uniformly
distributed in time --- instead, random processes create apparent
clustering and it is important to carefully consider whether apparent
clusters, or times of less activity, go beyond what is expected from a
simple random process," Michael told OurAmazingPlanet. "So far, my
results show that the apparent clustering is consistent with a random
process."

If the apparent clustering of these quakes is a matter of chance, then
seismologists can't say whether or not another huge temblor is likely
to
erupt anytime soon.

"The recent spate of great earthquakes can be explained as a random
fluctuation without predictive power for the future," Michael said. He
added that global predictions of earthquakes and the damage they
inflict should use the longest possible historical record for an area
"rather than focusing on the recent past."

Long-term record

Seismologist Richard Aster at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and
Technology and his colleagues looked at historical catalogs of
earthquakes along with more recent findings to create a long-term
record of the cumulative size of earthquakes around the world.

They suggest there were relatively low rates of big earthquakes during
the periods 1907 to 1950 and 1967 to 2004. However, they found the
rate of large earthquakes increased substantially during the period
1950 to 1967 and appears to be on the rise again since 2004, since the
devastating magnitude 9.1 to 9.3 earthquake that struck Indonesia and
generated a massive tsunami late that year.

Still, this finding "is not statistically differentiable from
randomness," Aster told OurAmazingPlanet.

Progress into understanding whether there are ages of major quakes or
not may be slow "because we just don't get that many great earthquakes
to produce a better sampling of this natural process," Aster said.

"We only get a few magnitude 9-plus earthquakes per century, for example
--- fortunately for earthquake risks around the world, these events are
rare," Aster said. "There are only 14 earthquakes in the past 111 years
greater than magnitude 8.5."

Michael agreed. "The main limitation is that we don't have enough data,"
he said. "We can't say that clustering doesn't exist. We can only say
that the data doesn't let us reject the hypothesis that the data is
random. If there was more data, then the results could change --- but
that will take decades to occur."

The scientists detailed their findings on April 14 at the Seismological
Society of America meeting in Memphis, Tenn.

http://www.csmonitor.com/Science/2011/0420/Are-we-entering-an-age-of-major-earthquakes

-- 
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*"Success is a mind set, not just an achievement"*

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