✨ New paper out with Marine Denolle, Estelle Chaussard, Dario Solano-Rojas, Enrique Cabral-Cano, Luis Quintanar, Diana Morales Padilla and Enrique Fernandez-Torres: Seismic velocity changes in the Mexico City Basin ✨

https://se.copernicus.org/articles/14/529/2023/

🧵 with gummibears to illustrate our method and findings follows...

#seismology #earthtodon #cdmx

Probing environmental and tectonic changes underneath Mexico City with the urban seismic field

Abstract. The sediments underneath Mexico City have unique mechanical properties that give rise to strong site effects. We investigated temporal changes in the seismic velocity at strong-motion and broadband seismic stations throughout Mexico City, including sites with different geologic characteristics ranging from city center locations situated on lacustrine clay to hillside locations on volcanic bedrock. We used autocorrelations of urban seismic noise, enhanced by waveform clustering, to extract subtle seismic velocity changes by coda wave interferometry. We observed and modeled seasonal, co- and post-seismic changes, as well as a long-term linear trend in seismic velocity. Seasonal variations can be explained by self-consistent models of thermoelastic and poroelastic changes in the subsurface shear wave velocity. Overall, sites on lacustrine clay-rich sediments appear to be more sensitive to seasonal surface temperature changes, whereas sites on alluvial and volcaniclastic sediments and on bedrock are sensitive to precipitation. The 2017 Mw 7.1 Puebla and 2020 Mw 7.4 Oaxaca earthquakes both caused a clear drop in seismic velocity, followed by a time-logarithmic recovery that may still be ongoing for the 2017 event at several sites or that may remain incomplete. The slope of the linear trend in seismic velocity is correlated with the downward vertical displacement of the ground measured by interferometric synthetic aperture radar, suggesting a causative relationship and supporting earlier studies on changes in the resonance frequency of sites in the Mexico City basin due to groundwater extraction. Our findings show how sensitively shallow seismic velocity and, in consequence, site effects react to environmental, tectonic and anthropogenic processes. They also demonstrate that urban strong-motion stations provide useful data for coda wave monitoring given sufficiently high-amplitude urban seismic noise.

Very happy to have spotted a few #seismologists, hoping to find #Geophysics folks & others!

I'm working on seismic waveform modelling in #Geothermal areas and ambient seismic noise (imperceptible but informative seismic waves sent by oceans, weather, humans...) @ the Swiss Seismological Service.

I'm planning on posting conference and paper news. Frankly, I'm hobbyless, but love coffee, good food & conversation, pizza, poems and mountains!
#earthtodon #introduction #STEM

Fellow #earthscience #geoscience #geology #geophysics folks, let's make #earthtodon a thing!

Use the hashtag, get more Earthy folks from twitter here, and let's all connect again on this much better platform. It's been great to expand my network these past few days and so far I'm loving the content you all are posting. Let's keep it going!