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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 113,
F03011,
doi:10.1029/2008JF001005,
2008
Seismic and hydroacoustic tremor generated by colliding icebergs
D. R. MacAyeal
Department of Geophysical Sciences, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA
E. A. Okal
Department of Geological Sciences, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, USA
R. C. Aster
Geophysical Research Center and Department of Earth and Environmental Science, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology,
Socorro, New Mexico, USA
J. N. Bassis
Institute for Geophysics and Planetary Physics, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California San Diego, La
Jolla, California, USA
Abstract
Iceberg harmonic tremor (IHT) emanating from tabular icebergs in the Southern Ocean and along calving margins of the Antarctic
Ice Sheet is a complex, evolving signal at frequencies above approximately 0.5 Hz. IHT has been observed as T phases on islands
in the equatorial Pacific, as hydroacoustic signals in the Indian Ocean, and by local and regional Antarctic seismic networks.
To identify the IHT source mechanism and to understand its relevance to iceberg calving, evolution, and breakup, we deployed
seismometers on a giant (25 by 50 km) tabular iceberg called C16 in the Ross Sea, Antarctica, during a uniquely accessible
period (austral summer, 2003–2004) when it was aground against the northern shore of Ross Island. During the deployment period,
C16 was in sporadic contact with another giant tabular iceberg, B15A, that was moving under the influence of local ocean currents.
This study reveals that the C16-associated IHT was a manifestation of extended episodes of discrete, repeating stick-slip
icequakes (typically thousands of individual subevents per hour) produced when the cliff-like edges of the tabular icebergs
underwent glancing, strike-slip collisions. The IHT signal that we observed is thus not a phenomenon associated with iceberg
elastic or fluid resonance modes, but is instead the consequence of long sequences of very regularly spaced and similar pulses
of seismic radiation from these constituent stick-slip subevents. IHT represents a newly identified glaciogenic source of
seismicity that can be used to improve our understanding of iceberg dynamics and possibly of ice shelf disintegration processes.
Received 22
February
2008;
accepted 19
June
2008;
published 1
August
2008.
Keywords: tremor;
iceberg;
Antarctica.
Index Terms: 0732 Cryosphere: Icebergs; 7215 Seismology: Earthquake source observations (1240); 0728 Cryosphere: Ice shelves; 0776 Cryosphere: Glaciology (1621, 1827, 1863); 9310 Geographic Location: Antarctica (4207).
Read Full Article (file size: 991115 bytes) Cited by
Citation: MacAyeal, D. R., E. A. Okal, R. C. Aster, and J. N. Bassis
(2008),
Seismic and hydroacoustic tremor generated by colliding icebergs,
J. Geophys. Res.,
113,
F03011,
doi:10.1029/2008JF001005.
Copyright 2008 by the American Geophysical Union.
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