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Japanese scientists detect rare, deep-earth tremor to help improve early detection of earthquakes, storms

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People wearing and holding helmets take part in a drill simulating a 7.2 magnitude earthquake in Tokyo, Japan on August 26. Photo: Reuters
Agence France-Presse

Scientists who study earthquakes in Japan said on Thursday they have detected a rare deep-Earth tremor for the first time and traced its location to a distant and powerful storm.

The findings, published in the US journal Science, could help experts learn more about the Earth’s inner structure and improve detection of earthquakes and oceanic storms.

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The storm in the North Atlantic was known as a “weather bomb,” a small but potent storm that gains punch as pressure quickly mounts.

Groups of waves sloshed and pounded the ocean floor during the storm, which struck between Greenland and Iceland.

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Using seismic equipment on land and on the seafloor that usually detects the Earth’s crust crumbling during earthquakes, researchers found something they had not detected before – a tremor known as an S wave microseism.

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