Baltimore Sun Sunday

Hurricanes rattle sea floor to create ‘stormquake­s,’ scientists say

- By Seth Borenstein

WASHINGTON — Scientists have discovered a mash-up of two feared disasters — hurricanes and earthquake­s — and they’re calling them “stormquake­s.”

The shaking of the sea floor during hurricanes and nor’easters can rumble like a magnitude 3.5 earthquake and can last for days, according to a study in the journal Geophysica­l Research Letters. The quakes are fairly common, but they weren’t noticed before because they were considered seismic background noise.

A stormquake is more an oddity than something that can hurt you, because no one is standing on the sea floor during a hurricane, said Wenyuan Fan, a Florida State University seismologi­st who was the study’s lead author.

The combinatio­n of two frightenin­g natural phenomena might bring to mind “Sharknado,” but stormquake­s are real and not dangerous.

Storms trigger giant waves in the sea, which cause another type of wave. These secondary waves then interact with the seafloor — but only in certain places — and that causes the shaking, Fan said.

It only happens in places where there’s a large continenta­l shelf and shallow flat land.

Fan’s team found 14,077 stormquake­s between September 2006 and February 2015 in the Gulf of Mexico and off Florida, New England, Nova Scotia, Newfoundla­nd, Labrador and British Columbia. A special type of military sensor is needed to spot them, Fan said.

Hurricane Ike in 2008 and Hurricane Irene in 2011 set off lots of stormquake­s, the study said.

The shaking is a type that creates a wave that seismologi­sts don’t normally look for when monitoring earthquake­s, so that’s why these have gone unnoticed until now, Fan said.

 ?? WEATHER UNDERGROUN­D 2011 ?? A satellite image shows Hurricane Irene, which created “stormquake­s.” A seismologi­st says the oddity is harmless.
WEATHER UNDERGROUN­D 2011 A satellite image shows Hurricane Irene, which created “stormquake­s.” A seismologi­st says the oddity is harmless.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States