Spatiotemporal relationships between earthquakes of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the Atlantic continental margins

Thesis advisor: John E. Ebel The seismicity of the mid Atlantic Ridge (MAR) was compared in space and time with the seismicity along the Atlantic continental margins of Europe, Africa, North America, the Carribean and South America in a bid to appraise the level of influence of the ridge push force...

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Main Author: Bolarinwa, Oluwaseyi Joseph
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:104565
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spelling ftbostoncollir:oai:dlib.bc.edu:bc-ir_104565 2023-05-15T17:37:14+02:00 Spatiotemporal relationships between earthquakes of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the Atlantic continental margins Bolarinwa, Oluwaseyi Joseph 2015 electronic application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:104565 English eng Boston College Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Atlantic-ridge Continental Earthquake Margin Relationship Spatiotemporal Text thesis 2015 ftbostoncollir 2022-03-05T18:31:32Z Thesis advisor: John E. Ebel The seismicity of the mid Atlantic Ridge (MAR) was compared in space and time with the seismicity along the Atlantic continental margins of Europe, Africa, North America, the Carribean and South America in a bid to appraise the level of influence of the ridge push force at the MAR on the Atlantic coastal seismicity. By analyzing the spatial and temporal patterns of many earthquakes (along with the patterns in their stress directions) in diverse places with similar tectonic settings, it is hoped that patterns that might be found indicate some of the average properties of the forces that are causing the earthquakes. The spatial analysis of the dataset set used shows that areas with higher seismic moment release along the north MAR spatially correlate with areas with relatively lower seismic moment release along the north Atlantic continental margins (ACM) and vice versa. This inverse spatial correlation observed between MAR seismicity and ACM seismicity might be due to the time (likely a long time) it takes stress changes from segments of the MAR currently experiencing high seismic activity to propagate to the associated passive margin areas presently experiencing relatively low seismic activity. Furthermore, the number of Atlantic basin and Atlantic coast earthquakes occurring away from the MAR is observed to be independent of the proximity of earthquake’s epicenters from the MAR axis. The effect of local stress as noted by Wysession et al. (1995) might have contributed to the independence of Atlantic basin and Atlantic coast earthquake proximity from the MAR. The Latchman (2011) observation of strong earthquakes on a specific section of the MAR being followed by earthquakes on Trinidad and Tobago was tested on other areas of the MAR and ACM. It was found that that the temporal delay observed by Latchman does not exist for the seismicity along other areas along the MAR and ACM. Within the time window used for this study, it appears that seismicity is occurring randomly in space away from the MAR. The weak anticorrelations between ACM and MAR seismicity show that the ridge push force probably has some level of influence on the ACM seismicity. However, as revealed from previous research on the study area, the forces resulting from lateral density contrasts related to topographic features and lateral density variations between oceanic and continental crust also appear to significantly influence the seismicity of the Atlantic coastal margins. Thesis (MS) — Boston College, 2015. Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Discipline: Geology and Geophysics. Thesis North Atlantic Boston College: eScholarship@BC Mid-Atlantic Ridge Trinidad ENVELOPE(-60.734,-60.734,-63.816,-63.816)
institution Open Polar
collection Boston College: eScholarship@BC
op_collection_id ftbostoncollir
language English
topic Atlantic-ridge
Continental
Earthquake
Margin
Relationship
Spatiotemporal
spellingShingle Atlantic-ridge
Continental
Earthquake
Margin
Relationship
Spatiotemporal
Bolarinwa, Oluwaseyi Joseph
Spatiotemporal relationships between earthquakes of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the Atlantic continental margins
topic_facet Atlantic-ridge
Continental
Earthquake
Margin
Relationship
Spatiotemporal
description Thesis advisor: John E. Ebel The seismicity of the mid Atlantic Ridge (MAR) was compared in space and time with the seismicity along the Atlantic continental margins of Europe, Africa, North America, the Carribean and South America in a bid to appraise the level of influence of the ridge push force at the MAR on the Atlantic coastal seismicity. By analyzing the spatial and temporal patterns of many earthquakes (along with the patterns in their stress directions) in diverse places with similar tectonic settings, it is hoped that patterns that might be found indicate some of the average properties of the forces that are causing the earthquakes. The spatial analysis of the dataset set used shows that areas with higher seismic moment release along the north MAR spatially correlate with areas with relatively lower seismic moment release along the north Atlantic continental margins (ACM) and vice versa. This inverse spatial correlation observed between MAR seismicity and ACM seismicity might be due to the time (likely a long time) it takes stress changes from segments of the MAR currently experiencing high seismic activity to propagate to the associated passive margin areas presently experiencing relatively low seismic activity. Furthermore, the number of Atlantic basin and Atlantic coast earthquakes occurring away from the MAR is observed to be independent of the proximity of earthquake’s epicenters from the MAR axis. The effect of local stress as noted by Wysession et al. (1995) might have contributed to the independence of Atlantic basin and Atlantic coast earthquake proximity from the MAR. The Latchman (2011) observation of strong earthquakes on a specific section of the MAR being followed by earthquakes on Trinidad and Tobago was tested on other areas of the MAR and ACM. It was found that that the temporal delay observed by Latchman does not exist for the seismicity along other areas along the MAR and ACM. Within the time window used for this study, it appears that seismicity is occurring randomly in space away from the MAR. The weak anticorrelations between ACM and MAR seismicity show that the ridge push force probably has some level of influence on the ACM seismicity. However, as revealed from previous research on the study area, the forces resulting from lateral density contrasts related to topographic features and lateral density variations between oceanic and continental crust also appear to significantly influence the seismicity of the Atlantic coastal margins. Thesis (MS) — Boston College, 2015. Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Discipline: Geology and Geophysics.
format Thesis
author Bolarinwa, Oluwaseyi Joseph
author_facet Bolarinwa, Oluwaseyi Joseph
author_sort Bolarinwa, Oluwaseyi Joseph
title Spatiotemporal relationships between earthquakes of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the Atlantic continental margins
title_short Spatiotemporal relationships between earthquakes of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the Atlantic continental margins
title_full Spatiotemporal relationships between earthquakes of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the Atlantic continental margins
title_fullStr Spatiotemporal relationships between earthquakes of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the Atlantic continental margins
title_full_unstemmed Spatiotemporal relationships between earthquakes of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the Atlantic continental margins
title_sort spatiotemporal relationships between earthquakes of the mid-atlantic ridge and the atlantic continental margins
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:104565
long_lat ENVELOPE(-60.734,-60.734,-63.816,-63.816)
geographic Mid-Atlantic Ridge
Trinidad
geographic_facet Mid-Atlantic Ridge
Trinidad
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_rights Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted.
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