One quake can trigger another

One quake can trigger anotherSydney, October 12 : A recent cluster of large earthquakes in the South Pacific has led some scientists to wonder if one quake triggers another.

Last week, a series of seven major earthquakes rocked a small area near Vanuatu and the Santa Cruz Islands in less than 24 hours.

The unusual swarm of four magnitude 6 and three magnitude 7 events, and many smaller aftershocks, has a lot of people asking what it means and whether the quakes have any connection to the very recent large quake in Samoa or even the
9.2 Sumatra-Andaman monster earthquake of five years ago.

"It's not unprecedented, but getting three events above 7 is unusual," seismic researcher Dr Susan Hough of the US Geological Survey told ABC News.

Hough has investigated similar, more powerful quake swarms - most notably the five large 7 and 8-magnitude quakes that struck the New Madrid area of Missouri in the winter of 1811-1812.

"What New Madrid and other clusters of large quakes have taught seismologists is that it's largely a game of chance," said Hough.

"Since we don't have enough data on the exact happenings inside the Earth's crust to be more precise, we must resort to working out the odds of one shock being a foreshock of a larger quake or not, based on what's happened before," she added.

"For instance, anytime an earthquake happens there's a one-in-20 chance something bigger will follow," said Hough.

In the case of the Vanuatu swarm, there was first a 4.9 foreshock, then hours later a mighty 7.6 shock.

That second quake might have been mistaken for a main event had it not been followed 15 minutes later by 7.8 magnitude show stopper.

An hour later, there was a vigorous 7.3 magnitude aftershock, then a couple of dozen more aftershocks ranging from magnitude 4.9 to 6.8.

"The good news from all this is that despite the rarity of the swarm, these quakes, individually, are not the worst sorts of events produced in the collision zone of tectonic plates in that part of the world," said Hough.

She said that a genuinely big quake for a subduction zone is more in the range of a magnitude 9.

Then there is the matter of whether the South Pacific cluster is in any way "teleconnected," as seismologists say, to the 8.0 magnitude Samoan event of September 29 or the 9.2 magnitude Sumatra-Andaman event of Boxing Day 2004.

"It's well within the realm of possibility," said Hough. "The (seismic) waves come tumbling through and disturb the fault zone and it causes little earthquakes," she added. (ANI)