- Plate Boundary Observatory PBO
The Plate Boundary Observatory or (PBO) is one of three components of the
Earthscope project, along with USArray andSAFOD (the San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth) [ [http://www.earthscope.org/ EarthScope: An Earth Science Program ] ] . The PBO is exploring the structure and evolution of the North American continent and the processes related to earthquakes and volcanoes by installing an array of high precision Global Positioning SystemGPS monuments, borehole strainmeters, and tiltmeters throughout the western United States [ [http://pboweb.unavco.org/ UNAVCO: Plate Boundary Observatory (PBO) ] ] [ [http://anf.ucsd.edu/ Array Network Facility] ] [ [http://www.iris.edu/ Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology] ] .
UNAVCO [ [http://www.unavco.org UNAVCO Home Page ] ] , a membership-governed consortium funded by theNational Science Foundation (NSF) andNASA , installs the PBO. Upon completion in September of 2008, their will be 875 GPS stations, 103 borehole strainmeters, and 5 laser strainmeters throughout the western United States andAlaska concentrated around the most active fault systems andvolcanoes .
TheGPS stations are categorized into five clusters. The transform cluster is in the vicinity of the San Andreas transform fault, which cuts throughCalifornia ; the subduction cluster is in theCascadia subduction zone , which includes northern California,Oregon ,Washington , and southernBritish Columbia , and is a result of theJuan de Fuca plate subducting under theNorth American plate ; the extension cluster is in theBasin and Range region; the volcanic cluster is in volcanic regions such as theYellowstone caldera , theLong Valley caldera , and theCascade volcanoes ; the backbone cluster is at 100-200 km across the United States to provide complete spatial coverage.
The GPS instrumentation is high-precision and continuously operating. High-precision means the units can detect sub-cm motion, and continuously operating means a 15 second sampling rate and one data file for every 24 hours. A completed PBO GPS station occupies about a three by three meter plot of land.
Some scientific questions that are being addressed by the EarthScope project and the PBO include:
* How does accumulated strain lead toearthquakes ?
* Are there recognizable precursors to earthquakes?
* How does the evolution of thecontinent influence the motions that are happening today?
* What happens togeologic structures at depth?
* What influences the location of features such as faults andmountain ranges ?
* Is it inherited from earlier tectonic events or related to deeper processes in the mantle?
* How ismagma generated? How does it travel from the mantle to reach the surface?
* What are the precursors to avolcanic eruption ? [National Research Council, "Review of EarthScope Integrated Science" (Washington D.C., National Academy Press, 2001). ]References
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