Microearthquakes, swarms, and the geothermal areas of

More than 2100 microearthquakes were recorded and crudely located by using data from portable seismographs operated in Iceland during the summer of 1968. Another 600 events were located more precisely in three areas by using data from tripartite arrays. The earth-quakes recorded are largely confined...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Peter L. Ward
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1971
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.538.4488
http://www.tetontectonics.org/Publications/Ward1971MicroearthquakesIceland.pdf
Description
Summary:More than 2100 microearthquakes were recorded and crudely located by using data from portable seismographs operated in Iceland during the summer of 1968. Another 600 events were located more precisely in three areas by using data from tripartite arrays. The earth-quakes recorded are largely confined to 13 regions that are generally less than 100 km " in area. Most of the well-located events are at depths of 2 to 6 km but some less well located events may be as deep as 13 km. The microearthquakes are largely confined to the upper few kilometers of the oceanic layer, or layer 3 (Vp::::: 6.5 km/sec in Iceland). Geothermal areas in Iceland that are structurally related to a large number of faults and fissures generally have high microearthquake activity. Geothermal areas that have few fissures and appear to be structurally related to acidic intrusions contain little or no microearthquake activity. The distribution of zones of micro earthquake activity generally supports the hypothesis of a transform fault in southern Iceland. It appears that the stress along this fault is being relieved in geothermal areas by numerous micro earthquake swarms occurring more or less con-tinuously. Outside the geothermal areas, mainshock-aftershock sequences seem to be the dominant mode of stress release. The swarms can be attributed to weakening of the crust