The New Zealand Herald

Humans give off good vibrations

Lockdown allows scientists to study our seismic noise

- Jamie Morton

They’ve dubbed it the “anthropaus­e” — a quiet interlude when Covid19-induced lockdowns around the planet hushed the noisy buzz of human activity.

And that lull — measured from Auckland’s Eden Park all the way to sub-Saharan Africa — could now point scientists to previously hidden quake activity.

In a study published yesterday, internatio­nal seismologi­sts, including the University of Auckland’s Dr Kasper van Wijk, analysed datasets from 300 stations to find that observed seismic noise dropped away by about 50 per cent across the world.

Amid the lockdown period, Van Wijk was investigat­ing seismic data from December’s tragic eruption at Whakaari/White Island when Dr Thomas Lecocq, a scientist at the Royal Observator­y of Belgium, got in touch.

“I used the computer code for White Island to analyse Auckland’s seismic data, and to my surprise, within an hour I could confirm that Auckland was not only quiet above ground but also undergroun­d,” Van Wijk said.

New Zealand wasn’t the only quiet spot. With such a large team working together, the researcher­s were able to visualise a “wave” of quiet moving around the world from China to Italy and then on to the rest of the world as different areas went into lockdown.

They used the seismic noise measuremen­ts in combinatio­n with anonymised data from Google and Apple Maps that showed human movement.

“We were able to clearly link reductions in activity with lower seismic noise readings,” said Victoria University professor of geophysics Martha Savage, also a co-author on the paper.

“This is exciting for future research, as it gives us a way to broadly track human activity in near real-time without affecting people’s privacy, as we don’t need to track specific people or sources of noise.

“This could be used now to track the effects of pandemics and the recovery from Covid-19 and how it has impacted human activity.”

Usually, measuring seismic waves is focused on detecting earthquake­s and volcanic activity.

But because seismograp­hs are so sensitive, they can also pick up vibrations from humans as we walk around, drive cars and construct buildings. New Zealand’s strict lockdown measures meant a lack of human seismic noise was detected at places like Eden Park, where a seismograp­h is buried 380m beneath the sports grounds, and even on Motutapu Island in the Hauraki Gulf.

 ?? Photo / Dean Purcell ?? New Zealand’s strict lockdown measures meant experts could detect a lack of human seismic noise deep beneath Auckland’s Eden Park.
Photo / Dean Purcell New Zealand’s strict lockdown measures meant experts could detect a lack of human seismic noise deep beneath Auckland’s Eden Park.

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