Published: 14:14, December 17, 2020 | Updated: 07:54, June 5, 2023
Scientists: Antarctica rocked by 30,000 tremors in three months
By Reuters

This photo shows a glacier at Chiriguano Bay in South Shetland Islands, Antarctica, on Nov 07, 2019. (JOHAN ORDONEZ / AFP)

SANTIAGO - More than 30,000 tremors have rocked Antarctica since the end of August, according to the University of Chile, a spike in seismic activity that has intrigued researchers who study the remote, snowbound continent.

Several tectonic plates and microplates meet near the Bransfield Strait, leading to frequent rumbling, but the past three months have been unusual, according to the National Seismological Center of the University of Chile

Scientists with the university’s National Seismological Center said the small quakes - including one stronger shake of magnitude 6 - were detected in the Bransfield Strait, a 96-kilometer ocean channel between the South Shetland Islands and the Antarctic Peninsula.

Several tectonic plates and microplates meet near the strait, leading to frequent rumbling, but the past three months have been unusual, according to the center.

“Most of the seismicity is concentrated at the beginning of the sequence, mainly during the month of September, with more than a thousand earthquakes a day,” the center said.

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The shakes have become so frequent that the strait itself, once increasing in width at a rate of about 7 or 8 milimeters a year is now expanding 15 centimeters a year, the center said.

“It’s a 20-fold increase ... which suggests that right this minute ... the Shetland Islands are separating more quickly from the Antarctic peninsula,” said Sergio Barrientos, the center’s director.

The peninsula is one of the fastest-warming places on Earth, and scientists closely monitor the changing climate’s impact on its icebergs and glaciers.

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But climate scientist Raul Cordero of the University of Santiago said it was not yet clear how the tremors might be affecting the region’s ice.

“There’s no evidence that this kind of seismic activity ... has significant effects on the stability of polar ice caps,” Cordero told Reuters.