First transgenic mouse created to mimic Parkinson’s earliest symptoms

Washington, May 4 (ANI): Researchers have created the first transgenic mouse to display the earliest signs of Parkinson’s disease using the genetic mutation that is characteristic of human forms of the disease.

The mouse model, which expresses the same mutant proteins as human Parkinson’s patients, also displays early signs of constipation and other gastrointestinal problems that are a common harbinger of the disease in humans.

Thus, researchers at University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) have said that these animals could serve as a means of investigating therapies for reversing the neurological dysfunction of the disease at its earliest stages.

For a long time, researchers have suspected that the neurological component of Parkinson’s, which causes tremors and stiffness among other symptoms, is actually a late-stage effect of a larger, systemic problem, says Dr. Robert L. Nussbaum, senior author on the paper.

“This new model validates that theory by mimicking what we know to be the genetic pathway leading to Parkinson’s, while also displaying the earliest symptoms that occur in humans. This will give us an important tool in identifying an early intervention for this devastating disease,” said Nussbaum.

The UCSF mouse model is the first to display the full gastrointestinal symptoms as well, and is consistent with the progression of the disease in humans.

The study has been published in the latest issue of the journal, ‘Human Molecular Genetics’. (ANI)

Dalai Lama offers prayers for Tibet earthquake victims

Dharamsala (Himachal Pradesh), Apr 28 (ANI): The Dalai Lama and hundreds of Tibetan monks and nuns offered prayers in Dharamsala here on Tuesday for victims of the recent Tibet earthquake.

Prayers were held at Tsuglagkhang, the main Buddhist temple, and were attended by many locals and representatives of different non-profit organizations.

“The official report from the Chinese Government says that over 2,000 people have died, so because of the earthquake in Tibet, thousands of Tibetan people died. There are many people, who are suffering right now; there are many orphans who don”t have any parents,” said Tibetan Youth Congress President Tsewang Rigzin.

“We are gathered here today to pray for the deceased and show solidarity with our brothers and sisters inside the Tibet,” he added.

Reportedly, over 2,000 people died last week in the tremors that rocked the Qinghai province in the autonomous Tibet region of China. (ANI)

Tibetans pray for Chinese earthquake victims

Suja (Himachal Pradesh), Apr 24 (ANI): Tibetan students in India offered special prayers for Chinese earthquake victims in Himachal Pradesh’s Suja village.

Over 2,000 people died last week as tremors rocked Qinghai Province.

Tibetans in India expressed shock over the news.

“Ever since this unfortunate incident, we have organized prayers. The Karmapa has visited our school to perform prayers, and recently, they had a private audience with the Dalai Lama. His Holiness is very concerned about what happened to people inside Tibet,” said Namkhang, a teacher at the TCV School in Suja.

Over 40 students of different age groups are reported to have lost their family members and relatives in the tragedy.

The students, offered prayers for the peace of departed souls. (ANI)

Iceland volcano tremors stay strong, ash plume low

Iceland’s volcanic eruption was still causing strong tremors on Thursday, though far less ash and smoke was pouring out into the air.

Huge ash clouds spewed from the volcano last week and led to European air traffic being grounded for days. The smoke and fumes coming from the volcano have much less ash now and the plume has stayed at low levels.

However, the tremors coming from it are stronger now than when the ash plume was at its highest, at about 9 km (5.6 miles), said meteorological office geophysicist Steinunn Jakobsdottir.

“We don’t know exactly what this is telling us. This is kind of telling me that it is not stopping yet … As it looks now it could go on for a while,” she told a news conference.

Seismologist Bryndis Brandsdottir said the tremors could indicate a build up of lava, or molten rock, within the crater.

“The lava cannot really go anywhere. It is not flowing out of the crater, it must be accumulating there,” she told Reuters.

She said that if did find its way out of the crater then it would probably flow down the north side of the mountain, which is where floods occurred at the start of the eruption last week. This was mostly away from inhabited places, she said.

Another scientist said it was difficult to predict.

“The spectrum of possibilities is very wide. Volcanoes are very different from each other,” said Giuliano Panza, a professor of seismology at the University of Trieste in Italy.

He said studying volcanoes was like trying to understand a human heartbeat — changes in rhythm might mean a problem for one patient but not for another.

The volcano under the Eyjafjallajokull glacier, about 120 km (75 miles) southeast of the capital Reykjavik, has been erupting for 8 days.

“Only the northernmost fissure is erupting now and the plume is occasionally reaching a height of 3 km (1.9 miles), but it is mostly below that,” Jakobsdottir said. “It (the plume) is kind of stable at a height of 2 to 3 km,” she added.

For locals, ash was set to continue to fall in areas close to the volcano, raising concerns about dangers to livestock from high levels of fluoride in the ash.

Apart from the current volcano, Icelanders have also been warily eyeing the nearby Katla volcano, which is much larger and has a much greater potential for devastation.

It last blew in 1918, flooding huge areas.

Experts say history shows that an eruption at Katla often, but not always, follows one under the Eyjafjallajokull glacier.

(Reporting by Patrick Lannin; Editing by Charles Dick)

Tsunami alert lifted in Malaysia

Kuala Lumpur, Apr 7 (ANI): The Malaysian Meteorological Department has lifted the tsunami alert it issued for the coastal areas of Perlis, Penang and Kedah following the 7.5 magnitude earthquake in North Sumatra.

In a statement released on Wednesday morning, it said that it lifted the alert because only a small tsunami had occurred in Sumatra following the quake.

The earthquake had hit North Sumatera, 448km southwest of Pangkor Island Wednesday morning. Tremors were felt in the west coast of Peninsula Malaysia.

The department had earlier warned people to keep away from the beach, The Star reports.

In George Town, state Meteorological Department director Loh Eng Kee said the tsunami alert was called off at 8.20 am (local time) as Sumatra had only experienced a small tsunami.

“A tsunami alert was issued in Penang, Perlis and Kedah at 6.45am following a 7.5 magnitude earthquake off the sea of northern Sumatra.

“The National Security Council, police, the Chief Minister’s Office and the State Secretariat were informed of the situation.

“After monitoring sea conditions, our headquarters in Petaling Jaya issued a cancellation of the alert after only a small tsunami touched the coast of Sumatra,” Loh said.

Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng, who was briefed on the tsunami alert at the department in Bayan Lepas, said the relevant departments responded swiftly to the alert.We are thankful that there was no tsunami,” he said.

Tremors due to the earthquake shook high-rise buildings on Penang island including those on Macallum Street, Rifle Range and Sungai Ara causing fear among residents.

The Indonesia Meteorology and Geophysics Agency also issued a tsunami warning following the quake, but lifted it two hours later. (ANI)

Major earthquake hits Baja California; rattles Los Angeles

A major earthquake of 7.2 magnitudes hit Baja California in Mexico, shaking skyscrapers in San Diego and Los Angeles, whose strong tremors were felt as far as Phoenix and Las Vegas as well.

The immediate impact of the earthquake on people and buildings were not immediately known.

The quake was centred about 25 kilometre south-southwest of Guadalupe Victoria, the US Geological Service said, which initially said it measured around 6.9 magnitude, but quickly revised it to 7.2.

US Geological survey said, the earthquake occurred about 32 kilometres below the earth’s surface.

“Experts have said that such a depth increases the chances that the earth might absorb a majority of the shock, reducing the chances of damage on the surface,” The New York Times reported.

A 7.2 earthquake can cause major damage in structures, crack the ground and shift foundations.

The Los Angeles Fire Department said it was going into “earthquake” mode, checking buildings and bridges for possible structural damage and checking reports of people stuck in elevators.

“Rides were temporarily closed at the Disneyland theme park in Anaheim,” The Los Angeles Times reported.

“There were no reports of major infrastructure damage in Los Angeles, but reports were still coming in from San Diego and Mexico. San Diego fire officials were responding to at least one report of a damaged building,” the daily said in its news report posted on its website.

‘Earthquake cloaks’ may one day make buildings invisible to devastating tremors

London, June 27 (ANI): Let alone hiding persons or objects from prying eyes, future invisibility cloaks may even conceal buildings from the devastating effects of earthquakes, if physicists in France and the UK are to be believed.

Stefan Enoch of the Fresnel Institute in Marseille, France, is the researcher behind the “earthquake cloak” idea.

A research team led by Enoch has for the first time suggested that the physics of invisibility cloaks may one day enable scientists to design a cloak that could render objects “invisible” to destructive storm waves or tsunamis.

The seismic waves of an earthquake fall into two main groups: body waves that propagate through the Earth, and surface waves that travel only across the surface.

While controlling body waves will be too complex, Enoch’s team say that controlling surface waves is within the ability of conventional engineering.

Team member Sebastien Guenneau, associated with the UK-based University of Liverpool, says that the finding attains significance as it is surface waves that are more destructive.

The researchers have revealed that the new theoretical cloak comprises a number of large, concentric rings made of plastic fixed to the Earth’s surface.

They say that the stiffness and elasticity of the rings must be precisely controlled to ensure that any surface waves pass smoothly into the material, rather than reflecting or scattering at the material’s surface.

According to them, while travelling through the cloak, waves are compressed into tiny fluctuations in pressure and density that travel along the fastest path available.

The researchers believe that by tuning the cloak’s properties, that path can be made to be an arc that directs surface waves away from an area inside the cloak. When the waves exit the cloak, they return to their previous, larger size.

Unlike some of the optical invisibility cloaks studied in recent years, the new cloak is “broadband” and thus can divert waves across a range of frequencies.

The research group say that this becomes possibly by tuning different rings of the cloak to incoming waves of different frequencies. Waves pass largely unaffected through rings not tuned to their frequency.

“The outer rings remain nearly still, but the pair of rings tuned to the frequency of the wave move like crazy, bending up and down and twisting. For each small frequency range, there’s one pair of rings that does most of the work,” New Scientist magazine quoted Guenneau as saying.

Thus far, the researchers have simulated cloaks containing as many as 100 rings, even though fewer would be needed to protect against the most common kinds of earthquake surface waves.

As to how this technique can be applied to buildings, Guenneau says that they may be built into the foundations.

Even though work remains to be done to replicate the theoretical results experimentally, physicist Ulf Leonhardt at the University of St Andrews, UK, thinks that it is possible that invisibility physics may see its first real world applications of in guiding seismic or ocean waves rather than to manipulate light.

“I think this is fantastic – I really like taking ideas that have emerged from optics and using them in other applications,” he said.

A research article describing the “earthquake cloak” idea has been published in the journal Physical Review Letters. (ANI)

‘Barbaric’ Somalian Islamic radicals publicly chop off hands and legs of alleged thieves

London, June 26 (ANI): In an appalling incident in the Somalian capital, Mogadishu, pro-Al Queda insurgents on Thursday used a machete to slice off a hand and a foot from each of four men accused of stealing mobile phones and guns.

The men screamed in pain, as some 300 spectators were compelled to watch the slaughter by the al-Shabaab fighters. Some of the onlookers even vomited while the amputations were in progress.

An ad-hoc court set up by the hardline al-Shabaab movement had earlier this week found the men, aged 18 to 25, guilty of stealing mobile phones and guns from residents in several Mogadishu suburbs.

“We have carried out this sentence under the Islamic religion and we will punish like this everyone who carries out these acts,” The Scotsman quoted al-Shabaab official Sheikh Ali Mohamud Fidow, as saying.

The punishments, which leading international human rights groups pleaded unsuccessfully with al-Shabaab to forego, have sent tremors through western diplomatic and intelligence communities.

Al-Shabaab openly expresses its support for al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden, although intelligence sources said it has proved hard to identify what its formal links are to al-Qaeda. (ANI)

Scientists identify ‘molecule trio’ that kills neurons in Parkinson’s

Washington, Apr 30 (ANI): In a novel study, researchers at Columbia University Medical Centre have identified a trio of molecules that are responsible for killing brain cells in Parkinson’s patients.

They have showed that three molecules – the neurotransmitter dopamine, a calcium channel, and a protein called alpha-synuclein – act together to kill the neurons.

The symptoms of Parkinson’s – including uncontrollable tremors and difficulty in moving arms and legs – are blamed on the loss of neurons from the substantia nigra region of the brain.

“Though the interactions among the three molecules are complex, the flip side is that we now see that there are many options available to rescue the cells,” said Dr Eugene Mosharov, associate research scientist and study’s author.

The researchers showed that neurons die because calcium channels lead to an increase of dopamine inside the cell; excess dopamine then reacts with alpha-synuclein to form inactive complexes; and then the complexes gum up the cell’s ability to dispose of toxic waste that builds up in the cell over time. The waste eventually kills the cell.

The neurons will survive if just one of the three factors is missing, said the researchers.

“It may be possible to save neurons and stop Parkinson’s disease by interfering with just one of the three factors,” Dr. Mosharov added.

The researchers hope that a drug already in clinical trials – which blocks the culprit calcium channel – may work to slow or stop the progression of the disease.

The study is published in journal Neuron. (ANI)

15 killed in Afghan earthquakes

Kabul, April 17 (Xinhua) Two earthquakes hit eastern Afghanistan Friday, killing at least 15 people and destroying dozens of houses, a government spokesperson said.

Ahmad Zia Abdulzai said the tremors, which occurred about 90 km east of Kabul, have killed 15 people, injured 20 and destroyed about 100 houses.

The two earthquakes, of 5.5 and 5.1 magnitude, hit eastern Afghanistan in the early hours of Friday, the US Geological Survey reported.

One quake of 5.5 magnitude rattled the Hindu Kush border area between Afghanistan and Pakistan at 1.57 a.m. (GMT2127) at a depth of eight km and was followed by another other one of 5.1 magnitude at a depth of three km two hours later, the website said.

People in Afghan capital Kabul felt the tremors while casualties were feared in eastern Afghan province of Nangarhar.

The Hindu Kush range which covers northern and eastern Afghanistan are often jolted by earthquakes.

Grief and anger as Italy bids farewell to quake dead

L’AQUILA (Reuters) – Fabio De Felice did not want to leave his frightened grandmother alone after a day of tremors shook her house in Onna, an ancient village of 300 people in central Italy.

But those tremors turned out to be forewarnings of the country’s deadliest earthquake in nearly 30 years.

De Felice, 21, was killed with his grandmother as the quake caught them in their sleep on Sunday, reducing her stone house to a pile of rubble. Had he stayed at his home, a reinforced concrete building, he would still be alive.

They were two of the 40 people who died in Onna, the town hardest hit by the disaster.

“Granny was afraid. He wanted to keep her company so he went to stay for the night,” Fabio’s cousin, Emanuela Diterlizi, said as she arrived at a mass funeral for the quake’s 289 victims on Friday.

“They found them in bed, hugging each other. It’s a tragedy,” she said, her voice breaking.

Hundreds of grieving relatives and survivors gathered in silence at a police academy outside the city of L’Aquila, where 205 wooden coffins were laid out on the parading ground. A white sticker on each coffin identified the person inside.

Several small white caskets, containing the bodies of children, sat on top of their mothers’ coffins.

Some mourners dabbed their red eyes with tissues, others sobbed uncontrollably, hugged and comforted by family members and friends. A young man, his face badly bruised and a large cut stitched up on his forehead, stood in a corner staring vacantly.

But as Italy united in national mourning, victims’ relatives asked how so many buildings — not just centuries-old churches and stone houses but even modern apartment blocks — could fall to pieces in an area know for its high seismic risk.

“Today I just feel this big sense of void, but there’s also anger,” said Diterlizi, 25. “The houses should not have been built like that. Onna has been razed to the ground, there is nothing left. Only rocks and stones.”

Piero Faro, who came to bid his farewell to longtime friend Paola Pugliesi and her son Giuseppe, was also bitter.

“Their building just disintegrated. This should not have happened,” he said.

Survivors in L’Aquila and surrounding towns recounted how big tremors had shaken the area for months before Monday’s devastating quake, and were dismissed as not threatening by authorities.

“The thing is, when you’ve lived in this city for 30 years like I have, you get used to it. You think, ‘oh the house is moving a bit, but it will go away’,” said Angelo Daria, a student, who fled as the walls of his flat gave in.

“Then comes this huge roar, and your life changes in 20 seconds.”

Quake rocks western Rajasthan, 3 injured

New Delhi, April 9 (IANS) Western Rajasthan was jolted by a medium intensity earthquake early Thursday morning, a meteorological department official said.

The earthquake, measuring 5.3 on the Richter scale, was experienced in Jaisalmer and Barmer districts in western Rajasthan.

‘At 7.17 a.m., tremors were felt in Jaisalmer, Barmer and other nearby areas for 15-20 seconds,’ an India Meteorological Department seismologist said.

The Jaisalmer district collector said three people were injured in separate incidents. There were no reports of any deaths, the official said.

The earthquake occurred 33 km below the surface. Its epicentre was 27.1 degree north and 70.7 degree east.

‘The tremors were really strong. It thankfully stopped in a little while and not much damage was done around here,’ said Ramesh, a resident of Ramgarh in Jaisalmer district.

Italy quake toll reaches 27

Rome, April 6 (DPA) Twenty-seven people were killed Monday when a major earthquake rocked the central Italian region of Abruzzo, media reports quoted hospitals as saying.

The regional capital L’Aquila and the ancient town of Castelnuovo were especially badly hit in the quake, which had a magnitude of 5.8 on the Richter scale, and many more deaths were feared once a clearer picture emerged.

Four children were reported to have died in a hospital in L’Aquila, where numerous buildings also collapsed, including a student dormitory in the city’s historic centre, plus a four-storey building where up to 20 people were feared trapped.

The quake shook thousands of people from sleep and caused them to flee their homes. Thousands of houses were damaged, and police said numerous people were injured.

Cracks appeared in many houses after the quake, which was also felt in Rome and the Marche region.

The dome of a church in central L’Aquila caved in while the city’s cathedral was also damaged.

Emergency services authorities in Italy said the quake struck at 3.32 a.m. (0132 GMT) north of L’Aquila with a magnitude of 5.8 on the Richter scale and a depth of five kilometres.

The US Geological Survey reported the strength of the quake at 6.3, saying it was centred 95 km northeast of Rome at a depth of 10 km.

A magnitude-4.7 aftershock was reported shortly after the quake, which was preceded by two tremors with magnitudes of 3.5 and 3.9, Italian authorities said.

A section of the highway from L’Aquila to Rome was closed, and electrical and telephone services were cut off in several areas.

Emergency services informed Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and President Giorgio Napolitano of the quake and warned people living in the quake zone not to drive.

Magnitude-5.8 quake strikes central Italy; deaths feared

magnitude-5.8 earthquake struck central Italy early Monday, causing buildings to collapse in the historic centre of L’Aquila and raising fears of fatalities.

Police reported numerous injuries.

Rome, Abruzzo and other parts of central Italy were hit by the quake, whose epicentre was in the area of Abruzzo’s capital, L’Aquila, at a 5-kilometre depth, Italy’s ANSA news agency reported.

L’Aquila residents were shaken from sleep and ran out in panic onto the city’s streets.

Emergency services authorities said the quake struck at 3:32 am (0132 GMT) with a magnitude of 5.8 on the Richter scale.

The US Geological Survey initially reported the strength of the quake at 6.7 before lowering it to 6.3.

In the hours before the earthquake, two tremors had occurred with magnitudes of 3.5 and 3.9, they said.

Magnitude-5.8 quake strikes Italy, deaths feared

Rome, April 6 (DPA) A magnitude-5.8 earthquake struck central Italy early Monday, causing buildings to collapse in the historic centre of L’Aquila and raising fears of fatalities.

Rome, Abruzzo and other parts of central Italy were hit by the quake, whose epicentre was in the area of Abruzzo’s capital, L’Aquila, at a five-km depth, Italy’s ANSA news agency reported.

L’Aquila residents were shaken from sleep and ran out in panic onto the city’s streets.

Emergency services authorities said the quake struck at 3.32 a.m. (0132 GMT) with a magnitude of 5.8 on the Richter scale.

The US Geological Survey initially reported the strength of the quake at 6.7 before lowering it to 6.3.

In the hours before the earthquake, two tremors had occurred with magnitudes of 3.5 and 3.9, they said.

Deep brain stimulation treatment benefits Parkinson”s patients

Washington, Jan 7 (ANI): Deep brain stimulation treatment improved movement skills and quality of life in patients with advanced Parkinson disease (PD), a new study has found.

The study revealed that patients receiving deep brain stimulation also had a higher risk of serious adverse events than patients who received other medical therapy.

Deep brain stimulation is a surgical treatment involving the implantation of electrodes that send electrical stimulation to specific parts of the brain to reduce involuntary movements and tremors.

“However, recent reports highlighting unexpected behavioral effects of stimulation suggest that deep brain stimulation, while improving motor function, may have other less desirable consequences,” wrote the authors.

For the study, researchers led by Frances M. Weaver, Ph.D., of Hines VA Hospital, Hines, Ill., conducted a randomised trial to compare the benefits and risks of deep brain stimulation with those of best medical therapy for patients, of a wide age range, with PD.

A total of 255 patients with PD were enrolled; 25 percent were age 70 years or older.

All the participants were randomised to receive bilateral deep brain stimulation with leads of the stimulation device implanted in the following locations of the brain: subthalamic nucleus (n = 60) or globus pallidus (n = 61); or received best medical therapy (n = 134), which included management by movement disorder neurologists, who monitored medication use and nonpharmacological therapy (e.g., physical, occupational, and speech therapy).

And it was found that at 6 months, deep brain stimulation patients gained an average of 4.6 hours per day of on time (the time of good symptom control or unimpeded motor function) without troubling dyskinesia (involuntary movements), while the average change for the best medical therapy group was 0 hours.

Motor function improved significantly with deep brain stimulation as compared with best medical therapy.

Patients in the deep brain stimulation group experienced significant improvements in the summary measure of quality of life and on 7 of 8 PD quality-of-life scores, in comparison to patients in the best medical therapy group.

Neurocognitive testing revealed small decrements in some areas of information processing for patients receiving deep brain stimulation vs. best medical therapy.

The researchers found that the overall risk of experiencing a serious adverse event was 3.8 times higher in deep brain stimulation patients than in best medical therapy patients.

The authors said: “Caution should be exercised, however, against overstating or understating the risks of deep brain stimulation for patients with PD. Physicians must continue to weigh the potential short-term and long-term risks with the benefits of deep brain stimulation in each patient.”

The study was published in the latest issue of JAMA. (ANI)

Parkinson’s patients ‘at increased risk of developing osteoporosis’

Washington : Patients suffering from Parkinson’s disease are at an increased risk of developing osteoporosis, according to an expert.

While writing in Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, Dr Lee M. Zuckerman Chief Resident of orthopaedic surgery, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Rehabilitation Medicine, SUNY Downstate Medical Centre, in Brooklyn said that tremors, body rigidity, and problems with movement caused by PD may lead to complicated orthopaedic conditions.

People with Parkinson’s often move and walk less than non-suffers and generally stay indoors.

Decreased movement may lead to bone loss, and the reduced exposure to sunlight that generally occurs when patients spend little time outdoors is likely to generate a decrease in vitamin D, which is needed to keep bones strong.

This is particularly harmful to Parkinson’s patients, since the combination of decreased bone density and instability from tremors and rigidity caused by PD greatly increase a person’s risk of fallinga and breaking bones.

He said that involving family members in care could significantly improve a patient’s health.

“I recommend patients and their families read up on Parkinson’s disease so they can prepare themselves for the challenges that come with it,” said Zuckerman

This type of early education is important, because it can prevent these secondary problems from occurring. For instance checking bone mineral density and getting treatment for at-risk patients can help reduce the risk of fracture,” he added.

Although there are surgical treatments for orthopaedic conditions experienced by people with PD, the disease can have a negative effect on recovery.

For instance, the tremors associated with PD have been shown to interfere with the repair and rehabilitation of bone injuries. Those who have had a joint replacement are often relieved of pain and initially have improvements in mobility, but these improvements only last about a year.

“Whether this is because the disease is progressing or because the rehabilitation was insufficient is unclear. So patients now have to decide what they want to accomplish – more mobility or decreased pain.

They have to know that although their pain level should improve, their function may get worse after a year,” he added.

The therapies recommended to prevent orthopaedic problems in Parkinson’s disease include bone density treatment, physical therapy, vitamin therapy medication to increase bone density and optimizing therapies for gait and rigidity.

Trapped water cause of regular tremors under Vancouver Island in Canada

Washington, Jan 1 (ANI): Researchers at the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Canada have attributed regular tremors under Vancouver Island to trapped water in a portion of the fault area.

 

The Cascadia megathrust fault, named for its massive but infrequent earthquakes, runs along the length of North America’s western coast from northern Vancouver Island to northern California and is the boundary between two of the Earth’s tectonic plates.

 

An area on the fault line – approximately 35 kilometers under Vancouver Island – has also seen surprisingly regular “slips,” accompanied by small tremors – roughly every 14 months.

 

The last tremors recorded in this area were in May and lasted for about month, although none were strong enough to be felt by humans.

 

Megathrust fault lines in the region where episodic tremors occur are structurally weak and prone to slip and slide, but until now, scientists have been unable to explain why.

 

 

In a new study, UBC researchers Pascal Audet, Michael Bostock, Nicolas Christensen and Simon Peacock have demonstrated how water trapped in a portion of the fault area escapes periodically after pressure build-up, which in turn lubricates the tectonic plates and causes them to slip and slide.

 

“Scientists have offered different theories but this is the first detailed glimpse at the geological mechanics beneath the island,” said lead author Audet, who conducted the study as a PhD student at UBC’s Dept. of Earth and Ocean Sciences.

 

“While scientists are still a long way away from being able to predict earthquakes, this study brings us one step closer towards understanding the physical state of the megathrust fault and the earthquake cycle as a whole,” he added.

 

According to Peacock, UBC Dean of Science and an expert in subduction zone areas, “Additional sensors on the Island, or expanding the sensor array into the waters west of Vancouver Island, could help researchers determine whether fault properties change over time, and where changes are most significant along the fault line.” (ANI)