by Derek Beres
August 04,
2020
from
BigThink Website
Italian version
A house is collapsed
after a
6.4 earthquake hit just
south
of the island on January 7, 2020
in
Guayanilla, Puerto Rico.
Photo by Eric Rojas/Getty Images
The
planet is making
a lot less noise
during
lockdown...
-
A
team of researchers found that Earth's vibrations were
down 50 percent between March and May.
-
This
is the quietest period of human-generated seismic noise
in recorded history.
-
The
researchers believe this helps distinguish between
natural vibrations and human-created vibrations.
The planet's vibes are down...
That's the consensus from a team of researchers at six European
institutions; the study (Global
quieting of high-frequency seismic noise due to COVID-19 pandemic
lockdown measures) was based at the Royal Observatory of
Belgium.
Their research, published
in Science, found that human-linked vibrations around the planet
dropped by 50 percent between March and May 2020 - the quietest
period of seismic noise since scientists began monitoring the Earth.
Seismometers were invented in China during the 2nd century, though
today's version dates to the 1880s, when a team of British and
Scottish engineers worked as foreign-government advisors in Japan.
Today, we generally
discuss seismic waves in terms of bombs,
earthquakes, and
volcanic
eruptions, though human activity, such as travel and industry, also
produce such waves.
As the world slowed down during the pandemic - the researchers call
it an "Anthropause" - travel and industry ground to a standstill.
For the first time in
recorded history, researchers were able to differentiate between
natural seismic waves and those caused by humans.
The drop was most
noticeable in densely-populated urban areas, though even
seismometers buried deep in remote areas, such as the Auckland
Volcanic Field in New Zealand, picked up on the change.
Dr Stephen Hicks, a co-author from Imperial College London,
comments on the importance of this
research:
"Our study uniquely
highlights just how much human activities impact the solid
Earth, and could let us see more clearly than ever what
differentiates human and natural noise."
Earth is
quieter as coronavirus lockdowns reduce seismic vibration
The team investigated seismic data from a global network of 268
stations spread out across 117 countries.
As lockdown 'measures'
(due to
Covid-19) in
different regions began, they tracked the drop in vibrations.
Singapore and New York City recorded some of the biggest drops,
though even Germany's Black Forest - famous for its association with
the Brothers Grimm fairy tales - went quieter than usual.
The researchers also relied on citizen-owned seismometers in
Cornwall and Boston, which recorded a 20 percent reduction from
relatively quiet stretches in these college towns, such as during
school holidays.
The environmental impact
of lockdown has been dramatic. Indian
skylines are notoriously grey.
This
collection of photos
shows how quickly nature recovers when humans limit travel and
industry. Such photographs also make you wonder why we cannot
control emissions to begin with, now that we know the stakes.
Lead author, Dr Thomas Lecocq, says their research could help
seismologists out the difference between human-created vibrations
and natural vibrations, potentially resulting in longer lead times
when natural disasters are set to strike.
"With increasing
urbanization and growing global populations, more people will be
living in geologically hazardous areas.
It will therefore
become more important than ever to differentiate between natural
and human-caused noise so that we can 'listen in' and better
monitor the ground movements beneath our feet.
This study could help
to kick-start this new field of study."
Stray puppies
play in
an abandoned, partially-completed cooling tower
inside
the exclusion zone at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant
on
August 18, 2017 near Chornobyl, Ukraine.
Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images
The Earth is much stronger than us; humans are its products.
In his 2007 book, "The
World Without Us," Alan Weisman details just how quickly
nature recovers from our insults.
Chernobyl offers
a real-world
example, while
earthquakes caused by fracking-related wastewater
injection in Oklahoma are evidence of how much damage human
"vibrations" cause.
Weisman's poetic homage imagines a symbiotic relationship with
nature. This relationship depends
on our cooperation, however.
Weisman knows we aren't long for this
world, nor is this world long for this universe:
in just five billion
years, give or take, Earth will implode.
We all live on borrowed
time.
How we live during
that time defines our character.
While he strikes a
hopeful tone, Weisman knows nature will eventually have her way with
us.
"After we're gone,
nature's revenge for our smug, mechanized superiority arrives
waterborne.
It starts with
wood-frame construction, the most widely used residential
building technique in the developed world.
It begins on the
roof, probably asphalt, or slate shingle, warranted to last two
or three decades - but that warranty doesn't count around the
chimney, where the first leak occurs."
The play-by-play of our
demise continues, though Weisman offers plenty of proactive advice.
The question is,
will we be able to
live up to it?
Sadly, nothing in modern
society hints at the possibility...
The only way we seem willing to pause our relentless pursuit of
"progress" is when we're forced to do so, as in the current
pandemic. The results, as the team in Belgium shows, are measurable.
Whether or not we heed the call to slow our impact remains to be
seen.
Given precedent, it's
unlikely, though as Weisman concludes, one can always dream...
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