Mount Fuji In ‘Critical State’: Eruption Possible?
The highest point on the Japanese archipelago and a national symbol, Mount Fuji is constantly monitored by the government, due to its nature as an active volcano. Fujisan, as the Japanese call it, has rarely stirred in modern times, but researchers claim that the Tohoku earthquake of 2011 has increased subterranean pressure below the mountain, which sits at the meeting point of three tectonic plates.
This is what the Mount Fuji looks like from Space. pic.twitter.com/yL8DrnA3uA
— Learn Something (@LearnSomethlng) July 11, 2014
Researchers used a novel technique, according to a report in The Guardian,
to echo-scan the bowels of the Earth under Mount Fuji. With 800
sensors, Japan’s seismic network is one of the densest in the world, and
by focusing on signals commonly known as “seismic noise,” which are the
result of constant interaction between ocean swell and solid earth,
scientists were able to map geological disturbances caused by the
earthquake’s seismic waves.
Mount Fuji by Moonlight http://t.co/sUThYKzJSI pic.twitter.com/MLG8j6KxqX — Araceli (@Araceli7655) July 13, 2014
According to Florent Brenguier, a researcher at the Institute of
Earth Sciences and the lead author of a study on the findings, “Seismic
waves travel a very long way, going round the world several times. Their
movement makes the Earth’s crust vibrate, and rather like a shock wave
this produces breaks or cracks in the rock.” As io9
relates, Brenguier’s team discovered that the greatest disturbances
were centered in the bedrock under Mount Fuji. The volcanic regions “are
the ones where the fluids trapped in the rock – boiling water, gas,
liquid magma, which cause an eruption when they rise to the surface –
exert the greatest pressure,” according to Brenguier, who pointed out
that “the seismic waves add to this pressure, causing even more
disturbance.”
Enjoy this #MorningShot of Mount Fuji http://t.co/MusE8Hx6eq pic.twitter.com/65fubPXt6k
— tapiture (@tapiture) July 10, 2014
While the pressure under Mount Fuji is building, Brenguier posits
that scientists have no way of knowing when, or even if, and eruption
could take place:“We cannot establish a direct relation of cause and effect between quakes and volcanic eruptions, even if statistically the former lead to an increase in the latter. All we can say is that Mount Fuji is now in a state of pressure, which means it displays a high potential for eruption. The risk is clearly higher.”Recently, The Inquisitr has reported on heightened fears that a dormant super-volcano under Yellowstone Park in the United States may be showing signs of life, as evidenced by increased thermal activity in the region. While the two events are not thought to be connected, the techniques developed by Brenguier and his team could be used to examine other areas of seismic and volcanic interest, such as Yellowstone.
Mount Fuji last erupted in 1707, an event preceded by a magnitude 8.7 quake to the south of Japan, 49 days earlier, that generated a tsunami which claimed 5,000 lives. While the Tohoku earthquake and its attendant tidal wave are three years in the past, researchers caution that elapsed time does not necessarily mean Mount Fuji is slumbering.
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