The Daily Courier

Quiet boon for earthquake science

- By MIA RABSON

OTTAWA — For earthquake scientists, having hundreds of millions of people off the streets and out of the skies is providing a bonanza of data about the planet.

All planes, trains and automobile­s that aren’t running because of stay-home policies meant to fight the spread of COVID-19 have cut noise pollution in some cities by more than half, allowing seismologi­sts to record sounds from inside Earth they never could before.

John Cassidy, an earthquake seismologi­st with Natural Resources Canada, says holidays like Christmas are the closest we ever get to these low levels of background noise.

“It’s really unpreceden­ted to see this level of quiet,” said Cassidy, who is also an adjunct professor at University of Victoria.

Cassidy said things changed so quickly in terms of the lockdown few had thought much about the impact on noise until a scientist in Europe noticed it happening and the news began to spread through the community quickly.

In Canada, in the third week of March, major cities began to see traffic disappear almost to nothing, with normally packed freeways at times free entirely of cars. As internatio­nal flights were cancelled, and domestic travel slowed, air traffic dropped significan­tly as well. Many big manufactur­ing plants also reduced hours or closed completely during the lockdown.

Many of Canada’s seismology stations are not in big cities on purpose, to reduce the noise pollution all the time. But for ones that are, like in Montreal and Ottawa, the drop in noise after the lockdowns began mid-March was immediatel­y noticeable. In Calgary, the drop was more than 60 per cent. Cassidy says without the seismograp­hs picking up all the human-generated noise, scientists are recording small earthquake­s all over the world that normally go unnoticed.

Canada normally records between 4,000 and 5,000 earthquake­s a year, most of them on the smaller scale and not felt by people. Cassidy said for every 2.0-magnitude quake, which can be strong enough to sway trees or cause a small ripple on the surface of a lake, Canada will experience 10 earthquake­s at 1.0 magnitude, which are only felt below the surface and noticed by seismology equipment.

And for every 1.0 quake, there are 100 that are magnitude zero. It is those magnitude-zero quakes, or smaller, which are now being detected.

The extra informatio­n is helpful for everything from monitoring active volcanoes to better defining fault zones and even developing better images of Earth’s structure.

Cassidy says that won’t help predict future big earthquake­s yet but will be useful in helping engineers create better building codes for earthquake­prone regions.

Cassidy said knowing this is going to be temporary, seismologi­sts are working hard to track the data while they can get it.

“It’s unusual times,” he said.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? A driver looks at an arrivals board of cancelled flights at Haneda Internatio­nal Airport in Tokyo, Friday.
The Associated Press A driver looks at an arrivals board of cancelled flights at Haneda Internatio­nal Airport in Tokyo, Friday.

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