Geologists with Indiana University and several other Midwestern schools have identified widespread seismic activity along an “underappreciated” seismic zone in southeast Missouri and southern Illinois.
The seismic zone is named after a small Missouri town --- but it’s not New Madrid.
The little-knownSte. Genevieve Seismic Zone runs along the Mississippi River from Cairo, Ill. towards St. Louis, Mo. Scientists installed a 140-station seismic network in Missouri, Illinois, Indiana and Kentucky and detected many tiny earthquakes along theSte. Genevieve Seismic Zone between July 2011 and June 2012. Most ranged in magnitude from 1.3 to 3.0 and were too small to be felt on the surface.
Researcher Michael Hamburger from Indiana University said these instruments can record activity that is too small to be picked up by the regional seismic network.
“The concentration of earthquake activity in this area along the Missouri-Illinois border caught our attention,” Hamburger said.
TheSte. Genevieve system is comparable to the Wabash Valley Seismic Zone along the Illinois-Indiana border. That’s the same system that shook the Midwest in 2008 with the 5.8 magnitude Mount Carmel earthquake.
“I think the potential for larger earthquakes in this area still remains unknown,” Hamburger said. “We certainly know that there is a history of moderate size earthquakes in the range of magnitude 5.0 to 6.0 that have occurred in this area and suggest continuing earthquake hazards.”
The seismic zone has implication because it is in a populated region that includes the cities of St. Louis, CapeGirardeauandSte. Genevieve.
“The seismic activity that we associate with earthquakes down in the southern Mississippi Valley could perhaps extend to areas further north,” Hamburger said. “There could be additional sources of seismic risk that haven’t been examined in detail yet.”
The study “Seismicity of theSte. Genevieve Seismic Zone Based on Observations from theEarthScopeOIINKFlexible Array” was published in the November/December 2014 edition of Seismological Research Letters. It is the first published study by the collaborativeOIINKgeophysical research project. Researchers from Indiana University, Purdue University, the University of Illinois, and the geological surveys in Indiana and Illinois collaborate inOIINK, which stands for “Ozarks, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky.”
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