Araki, Eiichiro et al. (2004): Improvement of seismic observation in the ocean by use of seafloor boreholes

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 191
Identifier:
2004-057689
georefid

Creator:
Araki, Eiichiro
Carnegie Institution of Washington, Department of Terrestrial Magnetism, Washington, DC, United States
author

Shinohara, Masanao
University of Tokyo, Japan
author

Sacks, Selwyn
Japan Marine Science and Technology, Japan
author

Linde, Alan
author

Kanazawa, Toshihiko
author

Shiobara, Hajime
author

Mikada, Hitoshi
author

Suyehiro, Kiyoshi
author

Identification:
Improvement of seismic observation in the ocean by use of seafloor boreholes
2004
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
Seismological Society of America, Berkeley, CA, United States
94
2
678-690
We developed a long-term, high-quality seismic ocean floor borehole observatory system, the "Neath Seafloor Equipment for Recording Earth's Internal Deformation (NEREID). Four NEREID borehole observatories were installed in the Japan Trench off-Sanriku area (JT1, JT2), in the northwestern Pacific Basin (WP2), and in the Philippine Sea (WP1). The borehole sensors are cemented in the borehole to assure good coupling of sensors to the ground as well as to avoid effects of water flow around the sensors, which may have been a problem in previous borehole installations. The NEREID seismic records from two of the observatories (JT1, WP2) were free from long-period noise due to turbulence in the seafloor boundary current or to water flowing around the sensor that is significant on the seafloor. The infragravity wave noise clearly observed around 0.01 Hz on the horizontal components was significantly higher in the JT1 seismometer in the sediment because of the low shear modulus of the sediment. Ocean waves of long wavelength cause the infragravity wave noise. It is thus necessary to install seismometers in boreholes below the sediments to reduce the infragravity wave noise.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:42.0000
West:143.0000East: 160.0000
South:12.0000

Solid-earth geophysics; Applied geophysics; boreholes; crust; depth; geophysical methods; instruments; Leg 191; mantle; marine methods; noise; observations; Ocean Drilling Program; ocean floors; seismic methods; seismic networks; seismicity;

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