The fact that Cambridge doesn't lie on the San Andreas fault doesn't stop Harvard seismologists from contributing significantly to the study of earthquakes around the world.
While Cal Tech scientists got the lion's share of the press attention following the magnitude 6.6 earthquake in southern California last Monday, Harvard scientists are leaders in the study of global earthquakes.
The department of Earth and Planetary Sciences is the world center for data on large earthquakes, according to James R. Rice, McKay professor of engineering sciences and geophysics.
"From a global point of view," said Rice, "it doesn't help to live in L.A."
Although there is a significant minority of Harvard scientists interested in the actual physics of earthquakes, the department's research focus is on "using earthquakes as signals to understand the three dimensional structure of the Earth," Rice said.
Professor of Geology Adam M. Dziewonski was quick to say that seismologists aren't glad when earthquakes occur, although he did point out that many earthquakes do not cause the kind of damage sustained in California.
When the California quake hit, Dziewonski was at a conference of seismologists in New Zealand. He immediately put together a presentation for the scientists there, using information retrieved from a computer network.
The development of the network, which includes about 100 seismographic stations around the world, facilitates the work of seismologists who are in low-risk areas such as Cambridge.
Harvard uses a rapid earthquake analysis system developed here to collect world-wide earthquake data automatically.
Within hours of the California quake, Harvard scientists had analyzed the earthquake and sent out preliminary results to other scientists to give them an idea of what sort of fault to look for following the quake.
The most interesting aspect of the recent California quake from a seismic point of view is that it was not caused by the infamous San Andreas fault, or any other known, visible fault.
Rather, the quake was caused by what Goran A. Ekstrom, assistant professor ofgeophysics, is studying the hidden faults in theSan Joaquin Valley in California. The faults foundthere are analogous to the one that caused lastweek's earthquake. According to Ekstrom, the fact that thisearthquake is one of several in the last few yearsto be caused by such hidden faults will promptmore research on them. This earthquake "will further make peoplerealize that the focus shouldn't be exclusively onthe San Andreas fault," said Ekstrom. The cumulative damage resulting from thesehidden fault-based earthquakes may surpass that ofa major earthquake on the San Andreas fault,according to Dziewonski. Read more in News