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For many centuries people living on volcanoes have known that the
outset of seismic activity is often a forerunner of a volcanic
eruption. This understand ing allowed people living close to the
sites of the Mt. Nuovo 1538 eruption at Campi Flegrei, Italy, and
of the Mt. Usu 1663 eruption, in Hokkaido, Japan (to quote only two
examples) to flee before the eruptions started. During the second
half of the 19th century seismographs were installed on some
volcanoes, and the link between seismic and eruptive activity
started to be assessed on a firmer scientific basis. The first
systematic observations of the correlations existing between
seismic activity and volcanic eruptions were probably those carried
out at Mt. Vesuvius by Luigi Palmieri in 1856. Palmieri was the
Director of Osservatorio Vesuviano and built an electromagnetic
seismograph with the aim of "making visible the smallest ground
motions by recording them on paper and indicating direction,
intensity and duration." He was able to show the relationship
between earthquakes and the different phases of volcanic activity.
He identified the harmonic tremor which he indicated was a
precursor of volcanic activity: "the characteristic feature of the
ground mo tions preceding eruption is its continuity . . . (before
the eruption of 1861) the electromagnetic seismograph began to show
a continuous tremor." The Palmieri seismograph was also utilized in
Japan until 1883, when it was replaced by the new Gray-Milne
seismographs, and, later, by the Omori in struments."
Geodynamics concerns the dynamics of the earth's global motion, of
the earth's interior motion and its interaction with surface
features, together with the mechanical processes in the deformation
and rupture of geological structures. Its final object is to
determine the driving mechanism of these motions. It is highly
interdisciplinary. In providing the basic geological, geophysical
infromation required for a comprehensive mechanical analysis, there
are also many mechanical problems involved, which means the problem
is coupled intricately with geophysics, rock mechanics, seismology,
structural geology, etc. This is Part II of the Proceedings of an
IUTAM/IASPEI Symposium on Mechanics Problems in Geodynamics held in
Beijing, September 1994. It discusses different aspects of
mechanics problems in geodynamics involving the earth's rotation,
tectonic analyses of various parts of the world, mineral physics
and flow in the mantle, seismic source studies and wave propagation
and application of the DDA method in tectonic analysis.
Geodynamics concerns with the dynamics of the global motion of the
earth, of the motion in the earth's interior and its interaction
with surface features, together with the mechanical processes in
the deformation and rupture of geological structures. Its final
object is to determine the driving mechanism of these motions which
is highly interdisciplinary. In preparing the basic geological,
geophysical data required for a comprehensive mechanical analysis,
there are also many mechanical problems involved, which means the
problem is coupled in a complicated manner with geophysics, rock
mechanics, seismology, structural geology etc. This topical issue
is Part I of the Proceedings of an IUTAM / IASPEI Symposium on
Mechanics Problems in Geodynamics held in Beijing, September 1994.
It addresses different aspects of mechanics problems in geodynamics
involving tectonic analyses, lithospheric structures, rheology and
the fracture of earth media, mantle flow, either globally or
regionally, and either by forward or inverse analyses or numerical
simulation.
This new edition of the classic text by Aki and Richards has at
last been updated throughout to systematically explain key concepts
in seismology. Now in one volume, the book provides a unified
treatment of seismological methods that will be of use to advanced
students, seismologists, and scientists and engineers working in
all areas of seismology.
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