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Fewer glaciers, more earthquakes?

Jun 02, 2005 / alpMedia
According to the results of research carried out by the Universities of Münster/D and Berne/CH, the advance and retreat of glaciers and lakes can trigger earthquakes.
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The research teams studied changes to the glaciated area during the last Ice Age and related the results to palaeo-seismological data. They found that increases and decreases in the loads acting on the Earth's crust can encourage or delay the occurrence of earthquakes.
The research also shows that increased seismic activity develops some one thousand years after the unloading effect on the Earth's crust and can continue for about 10 000 years. This is particularly evident in the case of the Wasatch Fault in the USA. There the crust of the Earth was covered by huge saline lakes and glaciers at the height of the last great Ice Age 20 000 years ago. According to the authors of the report, the disappearance of the lakes and glacial retreat explain the rise in seismic activity in that region.
Infos and study: www.geo.unibe.ch/medien/erdbebenhaeufigkeit (de); Hetzel, R., Hampel, A. (2005): "Slip rate variations on normal faults during glacial-interglacial changes in surface loads" in: Nature 435, Seiten 81-84