Authors
Andrew Curtis, Heather Nicolson, David Halliday, Jeannot Trampert, Brian Baptie
Publication date
2009/10
Journal
Nature Geoscience
Volume
2
Issue
10
Pages
700-704
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
The Earth’s interior can be imaged by analysing the records of propagating seismic waves. However, the global array of permanent seismometers that record seismic energy is confined almost exclusively to land-based sites. This limits the resolution of subsurface images, and results in relatively few local measurements from areas of great geological and tectonic interest (for example, the mid-ocean ridges and the Tibetan plateau). Here we use an unconventional form of seismic interferometry,,, to turn earthquakes into virtual seismometers located beneath the Earth’s surface. Seismic waves generated by one earthquake lead to transient strain in the subsurface at other locations around the globe. This strain can be quantified from seismograms of independent earthquakes that have occurred in those locations. This technique can therefore provide information on the subsurface strain in regions of the globe that lack …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Curtis, H Nicolson, D Halliday, J Trampert, B Baptie - Nature Geoscience, 2009