Extra Weight from Meltwater May Trigger Earthquakes: Researchers
Climate change may trigger earthquakes and volcanoes
New Scientist, Sept. 23, 2009
Far
from being the benign figure of mythology, Mother Earth is
short-tempered and volatile. So sensitive in fact, that even slight
changes in weather and climate can rip the planet's crust apart,
unleashing the furious might of volcanic eruptions, earthquakes and
landslides.
That's
the conclusion of the researchers who got together last week in London
at the conference on Climate Forcing of Geological and Geomorphological
Hazards. It suggests climate change could tip the planet's delicate
balance and unleash a host of geological disasters. What's more, even
our attempts to stall global warming could trigger a catastrophic event.
Evidence
of a link between climate and the rumblings of the crust has been
around for years, but only now is it becoming clear just how sensitive
rock can be to the air, ice and water above. "You don't need huge
changes to trigger responses from the crust," says Bill McGuire of
University College London (UCL), who organised the meeting. "The
changes can be tiny."
You don't need huge changes to trigger a response from the crust. They can be tiny. Among
the various influences on the Earth's crust, from changes in weather to
fluctuations in ice cover, the oceans are emerging as a particularly
fine controller. Simon Day of the University of Oxford, McGuire and
Serge Guillas, also at UCL, have shown how subtle changes in sea level
may affect the seismicity of the East Pacific Rise, one of the
fastest-spreading plate boundaries.
The
researchers focused on the Easter microplate - the tectonic plate that
lies beneath the ocean off the coast of Easter Island - because it is
relatively isolated from other faults. This makes it easier to
distinguish changes in the plate caused by climate systems from those
triggered by regional rumbles. Since 1973, the arrival of El Niño every
few years has correlated with a greater frequency of underwater quakes
between magnitude 4 and 6.
The
team is confident that the two are linked. El Niño raises the local sea
level by a few tens of centimetres, and they believe the extra water
weight may increase the pressure of fluids in the pores of the rock
beneath the seabed. This might be enough to counteract the frictional
force that holds the slabs of rock in place, making it easier for
faults to slip. "The changes in sea level are tiny," says Day. "A small
additional perturbation can have a substantial effect."
Small
ocean changes can also influence volcanic eruptions, says David Pyle of
the University of Oxford. His study of eruptions over the past 300
years with Ben Mason of the University of Cambridge and colleagues
reveals that volcanism varies with the seasons. The team found that
there are around 20 per cent more eruptions worldwide during the
northern hemisphere's winter than the summer. The reason may be that
global sea level drops slightly during the northern hemisphere's
winter. Because there is more land in the northern hemisphere, more
water is locked up as ice and snow on land than during the southern
hemisphere's winter.
The
vast majority of the world's most active volcanoes are within a few
tens of kilometres of the coast. This suggests the seasonal removal of
some of the ocean's weight at continental margins as sea level drops
could be triggering eruptions around the world, says Pyle.
The
suggestion that some volcanoes erupt when sea levels drop does not
necessarily mean that sea levels rising under climate change will
suppress volcanism. In Alaska, Mount Pavlof erupts more often in the
winter months, and previous research by Steve McNutt of the Alaska
Volcano Observatory puts this down to a local sea level rise of 30
centimetres every winter due to low air pressure and high storm winds.
Pavlof's location means that the extra weight of the adjacent sea could
be squeezing magma towards the surface.
In
other regions, additional ocean weight at continental margins as sea
levels rise could bend the crust, reducing compressional conditions,
says McGuire. Magma may then find it easier to reach the surface at
adjacent volcanoes.
All
these examples may seem contradictory, but the crucial point is that
any change in sea level may alter regional stresses at continental
margins enough to trigger eruptions in a volcano already primed to
erupt, he says.
Small
changes in rainfall can also trigger volcanic eruptions. In 2001, a
major eruption of the Soufrière Hills volcano on the Caribbean island
of Montserrat was set in motion by particularly heavy rainfall. This
destabilised the volcano's dome enough for it to collapse and unleash
magma within. Now it seems even typical tropical rain showers could
trigger an eruption. And climate models suggest that many regions,
including parts of the tropics, are likely to get wetter with climate
change.
Adrian
Matthews of the University of East Anglia, UK, and colleagues measured
the minute-by-minute response of Montserrat's volcano after more than
200 bouts of precipitation over three years. The team found that these
events, which Matthews says were typical of tropical weather, were
followed by two days of increased volcanic activity.
A
rainy day increased the likelihood of dome collapse from 1.5 per cent
to 16 per cent. "It wouldn't have to be spectacularly heavy rainfall,"
says Matthews. "You don't have to have a hurricane."
Perhaps
the greatest geological hazards during climate change will be the
result of melting ice sheets. Apart from the risk that loose sediments
exposed by melted ice could slip into the sea as tsunami-generating
landslides, the removal of heavy ice could also trigger volcanic
eruptions. "Even thinning of a few tens of metres could make a
difference," says Andrew Russell of the University of Newcastle in the
UK.
For
example, Iceland's Vatnajökull ice cap sits over a plate boundary and
several volcanoes. That ice is likely to disappear within the next two
centuries. "If that happens you'll get rid of an awful lot of weight
that will allow an increase in volcanic activity," says Russell. In the
wake of the last ice age, volcanism was up to 30 times greater in
northern Iceland compared with today.
Icy
eruptions could reverberate round the world. In 1783, the Icelandic
volcano Laki sent a sulphurous smog over Europe, plunging it into an
extreme winter that killed thousands.
For
now, it is unclear just how much climate change will affect the
frequency and intensity of quakes and eruptions, says McGuire, because
Earth's sensitivity to climate is only now emerging. There is not yet
enough data to build predictive climate models linking the two systems.
But it's crucial that we consider just how easily our actions could
provoke the planet, he argues. "It's serious science, not
scaremongering."
Bury the carbon and set off a quake
It
all looked so promising - tidy carbon dioxide away underground and
forget about it. But even as the US's first large-scale sequestration
operation is getting off the ground at the Mountaineer plant in West
Virginia, geophysicists are concerned that burying the carbon could
trigger earthquakes and tsunamis.
In
a carbon sequestration power plant (CCS), CO2 is extracted from the
exhaust then pumped into aquifers and old gas fields several kilometres
beneath the Earth's surface. So far so good. But the CO2 expands as it
rises through the porous rock, increasing pressure inside. "If enough
CO2 is injected into an aquifer, it could increase the pressure enough
to reactivate a fault and trigger an earthquake," warns Andrew Chadwick
of the British Geological Survey.
Chemical
reactions between the injected CO2, water and rock could also
destabilise the rock, says Ernest Majer, a seismologist at the Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory in California who briefed the Senate on
CCS hazards this week. "It's such a new technology that none of these
issues have been addressed," says Majer. Even storage sites far from
human settlements could have disastrous effects, warns Christian Klose,
a geophysicist at the Think Geohazards consulting firm in California. A
CCS facility at the Sleipner gas field in the North Sea, may have
triggered a magnitude 4 earthquake in 2008. Had it been bigger, says
Klose, it might have triggered a tsunami.
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