Seismological Research Letters; March/April 2009; v. 80; no. 2;
p. 197-202; DOI: 10.1785/gssrl.80.2.197
© 2009 Seismological Society of America
Acquiring Real Time Data from the Broadband Ocean Bottom Seismic Observatory at Monterey Bay (MOBB)
Barbara Romanowicz1,
Paul McGill2,
Doug Neuhauser1, and
David Dolenc3
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INTRODUCTION
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Two-thirds of the Earth's surface is covered by oceans, which represents a
considerable challenge to investigations of global-scale dynamic processes in
the Earth's interior and of tectonic processes at ocean-continent boundaries.
Long-term ocean-floor observations are also necessary to better constrain
regional tectonics, such as on the western margin of North America where
tectonics and seismic activity do not stop at the continental edge. In
northern California, for example, the most active seismic zone is near the
Mendocino triple junction and is mostly offshore, as are a number of hazardous
faults such as the San Gregorio and Hosgri faults and part of the San Andreas
fault. Much effort has been expended to deploy networks of seismic stations in
the western United States, most recently broadband stations, with the
simultaneous goals of monitoring the background seismicity, understanding
modes of strain release, documenting seismic hazards, and providing
constraints on crustal and upper-mantle structure. However, because there are
very few offshore islands in central and northern California, practically all
stations are located on the continent. As a consequence, the study of
plate-boundary processes, as afforded by regional seismological
investigations, is heavily skewed on the continental side of the San Andreas
fault (SAF) system. Offshore seismicity is poorly constrained, both in
location and in mechanisms, as is crustal structure at the edge of the
continent.
The need for long-term ocean-floor seismic observatories has been widely
recognized, and several national and international efforts have been striving
for more than two decades to resolve the technological and logistical issues
associated with such deployments and establish such observatories
(e.g., Le Pichon et al.
1987; Purdy and Dziewonski
1988; Purdy 1995;
Forsyth et al. 1995;
Montagner and Lancelot 1995;
Suyehiro et al. 2002,
2006).
In April 2002 we deployed a . . . [Full Text of this Article]
Berkeley Seismological Laboratory
215 McCone Hall
Berkeley, California 94720 U.S.A.
barbara@seismo.berkeley.edu
(B. R.)
Copyright © 2009 by Seismological Society of America