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“Seeing” Continental Drift By: Stefi Weisburd Since the theory of plate tectonics was proposed 20 years ago, earth scientists have relied on geologic evidence averaged over millions of years to guess the boundaries and relative motions among the earth's dozen plates -- the floating pieces of the planet's outer shell, in which Image 1: Africa and South America before and after continental drift continents and oceanic crust are embedded. Remarkable advances in technology are now enabling scientists to "see" the motions of the Earth's plates on a yearly basis. In addition to confirming the geologic results concerning the large-scale motion of the plates, these new measurements are being used to home in on the detailed interactions between plates at their boundaries The two relatively new techniques use outer-space as a frame of reference. Energy signals from distant stars are monitored at different stations on the Earth. The differences in the arrival times for these signals help determine the movement of the plates between the monitoring stations. In Satellite Laser Ranging (SLR), movement of the plates is measured by comparing how long it takes for laser light pulses to leave the ground, bounce off a satellite and return to the ground stations. This is similar to the techniques used by naval submarines called sonar. Sound waves created by the submarine bounce off of objects and back to the submarine. These signals are used to determine where objects are under water and help the submarine navigate. Thomas Herring at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass., and his co-workers, is working with five years of measurements between sites on the North American and Eurasian plates. The researchers estimate that the two plates are moving apart at 1.9 centimeters per year (plus-or-minus 0.5 cm/yr). This compares well with the 1.7 cm/yr (plus-or-minus 0.3 cm/yr) geologic value based largely on the spacing between magnetic stripes that were naturally imprinted on the Atlantic seafloor. Measurements of the relative motion between the North American and Pacific plates are consistent with the geologic value of about 5.6 cm/yr (plus-or-minus 0.3 cm/yr). The Image 2: Alternating positive and negative bands on seafloor Pacific plate is sliding past the North American plate in a Northwest direction. The movement of the two plates is responsible for earthquakes along California's San Andreas Fault. In fact, the San Andreas Fault is often cited as a classic example of a sliding plate boundary (transform plate boundary). However, 10 years ago, SLR measurements began to reveal that the San Andreas Fault was moving at only 3.5 cm/yr. This "San Andreas discrepancy" leaves about 2 cm/yr of movement that is taking place somewhere else. "We want to know where that movement is because that is what gives us earthquakes," says Thomas Jordan at MIT. These new techniques for measuring plate movement will continue to help test and evaluate the long-term pattern of plate movement in California. The real excitement for these studies is that these techniques may catch shorter-term changes in plates prior to earthquakes, especially now that NASA's Crustal Dynamics Project plans to make more frequent measurements at fewer stations. "We have a cautious optimism," says Jordan, "that these networks will lead to new insights to the rupture process of really big earthquakes."