Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4965380 Computers & Geosciences 2017 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A new internet connected, wireless, low power, event detection geophone system.•Low power use makes long term event monitoring feasible.•New system successfully detected basal ice quakes associated with surface melt.•Three types of seismic events identified associated with stick-slip motion.

We have developed an innovative passive borehole geophone system, as part of a wireless environmental sensor network to investigate glacier stick-slip motion. The new geophone nodes use an ARM Cortex-M3 processor with a low power design capable of running on battery power while embedded in the ice. Only data from seismic events was stored, held temporarily on a micro-SD card until they were retrieved by systems on the glacier surface which are connected to the internet. The sampling rates, detection and filtering levels were determined from a field trial using a standard commercial passive seismic system. The new system was installed on the Skalafellsjökull glacier in Iceland and provided encouraging results. The results showed that there was a relationship between surface melt water production and seismic event (ice quakes), and these occurred on a pattern related to the glacier surface melt-water controlled velocity changes (stick-slip motion). Three types of seismic events were identified, which were interpreted to reflect a pattern of till deformation (Type A), basal sliding (Type B) and hydraulic transience (Type C) associated with stick-slip motion.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science Applications
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