Thursday, March 17, 2011

Listen To Sounds of the Japan Earthquake Recorded Live by Underwater Monitors Connected to Internet

The UPC’s Laboratory of Applied Bioacoustics (LAB) recorded the sound of 
the March 11 earthquake from sea-floor observatories
UPC monitors, live over the Internet, sounds of March 11 earthquake and 
aftershocks from underwater observatories.

The audio of the seismic event, detected by a network of underwater observatories located on each side of the epicenter, is available on the 
LIDO website: http://listentothedeep.com.

The Laboratory of Applied Bioacoustics (LAB), a unit of the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC), directed by Professor Michel André, has recorded the sound of the earthquake that shook Japan on Friday, March 11. 
The recording, now available online, was provided by a network of 
underwater observatories belonging to the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth 
Science and Technology (JAMSTEC) and located on either side of the 
earthquake epicenter, close to the Japanese island of Hatsushima.

The UPC laboratory is using this platform as part of Listening to the Deep 
Ocean Environment (LIDO), a LAB-led international project. “LIDO aims, for 
the first time ever, to record deep-sea sounds in real time and determine 
how artificial sounds impact the conservation states of the marine 
environment,” says Michel André. 
Equipped with hydrophones for monitoring underwater sounds in real-time 
over the Internet, the LIDO system has been continuously recording the 
sound of the earthquake and its aftershocks. LIDO obtains automatic 
recordings of the acoustic events detected. Sources are then identified 
and classified as being of biological or anthropogenic origin.

The system 
can be used to listen simultaneously to what is happening at different 
observatories.
On March 11, 2011, at 2:45 p.m. Japanese local time, the LIDO system 
acoustically detected and recorded the earthquake at JAMSTEC observatories 
located off the coast off Kushiro and Hatsushima. The recording is 
available on the LIDO website http://listentothedeep.com. The sound of the 
earthquake and two aftershocks registered by these two Japanese 
observatories is available in the “Sound Library” section of the website 
(under “Earthquakes”). The data published there have been accelerated 16 
times so that they can be audible to human ears. In the “Listen on Site” 
section of the same website, visitors can also listen to, and view, a live 
stream of the acoustic data in which aftershocks are continuously 
perceptible.

The spectrograms shown on the website reflect, both acoustically and 
visually, the intensity and energy distribution of the earthquake sound. 
The images illustrate the frequency and intensity of the sound by means of 
a spectrum of colors (with red and yellow being the most intense). 
The earthquake’s effect on Japan’s underwater ecosystem pales in 
comparison to its dramatic impact on the country’s population. 
Nevertheless, due to their sensitivity to noise, cetaceans are considered 
valuable bioindicators of the natural acoustic balance of oceans.

Their 
sensitivity and their crucial role in ecosystems have already made it possible to determine the tolerance of the food chain to exposure to 
artificial sound sources. 
The LIDO system has given access to these exceptional geophysical 
data—from Japan and other seismically active geographical areas around the 
world—that are already being used in other disciplines as bioindicators of 
the natural balance of the oceans. They can now assist in the development 
of models that would integrate the reaction of cetaceans to noise as a 
geohazard indicator in the event of major seismic activity.
The website also offers the general public the opportunity to witness the 
earthquake and follow its evolution in real time.
Undersea noise impact assessment
Understanding the link between natural and anthropogenic processes is 
essential to being able to predict the magnitude of the impact of changes 
in the natural balance of oceans. Deep-sea observatories can play a key 
role in assessing and monitoring these changes.

The LIDO project applies and extends techniques developed for passive 
acoustic monitoring to cabled deep-sea platforms and moored stations. 
Through the use of the information provided by existing and future 
underwater observatories, LIDO is helping to assess the impact of natural 
and manmade noise on the underwater environment and to describe long-term 
trends in ambient noise levels, especially as relates to the effects of 
human activities. The LIDO system contains several independent modules 
that process real-time acoustic data streams for noise assessment, 
detection, classification and localization of acoustic events, e.g. the 
presence of cetaceans.

The software developed under this project is currently in use at the 
European Sea-Floor Observatory Network (ESONET), at the ANTARES neutrino 
detector in France, at the UPC’s OBSEA shallow-water test site off the 
coast of Vilanova i la Geltrú in Catalonia, at the underwater platforms of 
the University of Victoria’s NEPTUNE network in Canada, and at the NEMO 
sites to the east of Sicily, operated by Italy’s National Institute of 
Nuclear Physics.

The software is also being used at the JAMSTEC observatories off the coast 
of Kushiro and Hatsushima in Japan. The Kushiro platform is located 140 km 
from the city of the same name and 2,500 m below sea level, while the 
Hatsushima platform is located 1,174 m beneath the sea in Sagami Bay. The 
epicenter of the March 11 earthquake is located between these two 
observatory networks.
JAMSTEC’s objective is to predict and understand global change phenomena 
triggered by large-scale natural disasters and environmental destruction 
caused by global warming, continental and submarine earthquakes, and 
volcanic eruptions.

Under an ongoing scientific collaboration agreement between the UPC, 
Japan’s National Research Institute of Fisheries Engineering (Fishing 
Technology and Information Science Division) and JAMSTEC, LIDO is 
continuously analyzing a live acoustic stream from the sea off the east 
coast of Japan in order to understand the effect of noise sources on 
marine fauna and ecosystems, as well as on the movement patterns of great 
whales.


  • HATSUSHIMA_Aftershock.mp3

  • HATSUSHIMA_Earthquake.mp3

  • KUSHIRO-OBS2_Aftershock.mp3


Source: Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya


No comments:

Post a Comment