Citizen Science and The University of Queensland Seismograph Stations (UQSS)—A Study of Seismic T Waves in S-W Pacific Ocean

Author:

Lynam Colin John1ORCID,Karunaratne Asanka2

Affiliation:

1. Royal Society of Queensland, P.O. Box 6021, Brisbane, QLD 4067, Australia

2. Science Department, Brisbane State High School, Brisbane, QLD 4101, Australia

Abstract

Seismologists listen to Earth’s noise as it rips apart (faulting), exudes (volcanoes) and swallows (subducts) large volumes of rock. Your mobile phone is most likely detecting such noise, right now! This paper is about one such specific noise, the T wave. It summarises an early and successful piece of citizen science, performed within The University of Queensland Seismograph Stations (UQSS) observatory, in cooperation with colleagues at CSIRO. It was designed to encourage young STEM students from Brisbane high schools to engage in “real” research, back in 1995. Bear in mind, this is a time period when science is changing considerably from analog to digital media and operational recording methods. The citizen science students used a pre-prepared decadal collection (1980–1990) of T waves, derived from the Brisbane seismograph (BRS) observatory data catalogue. BRS has been operating since 1937 and is part of the global World-Wide Seismograph Station Network (WWSSN). Fortunately, seismology is a very collaborative field. There is a lot of data analysis involved in the science of recording earthquake signals, with auxiliary definitive catalogues, observers logbooks, housing of the recordings themselves (analog and digital) and the software mediums that change over time. It equally tests housekeeping proficiency, where a maze of record-keeping problems can be encountered in a longitudinal data collection study such as this. Having completed the project report, Earthquake generated T phases on BRS Seismograph (Brisbane, Q’ld) a predictor for Tasman Sea Tsunamis? their (analog) results sat in a cupboard until recently. The project was re-analysed in 2022 for a higher-degree student, discovering a timely climate change implication for the study. The original research question has now been amplified with a brief literature review. We observe that currently in Australia, university and government earth science observatories have diminished, and in their place, public seismic networks (PSN) have evolved, either in backyard sheds or school science labs. We now additionally propose here that the level of expertise required ideally fits the role of advancing citizen science, for a real science advantage. This is already a topical citizen disaster preparedness action area, and we propose that it has applications as a possible educational strategy for citizen engagement in today’s climate emergency. In addition, we are hopeful that other researchers in oceanography will read this paper and decide to explore the ocean’s temperature rise phenomenon through the eyes of seismological observers.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Geography, Planning and Development,Building and Construction

Reference35 articles.

1. Lynam, C., Hearn, S., Karunaratne, A.M., and Lahey, B. (2021, April 14). Earthquake Generated T Phases on BRS Seismograph (Brisbane, Q’ld)—A Predictor for Tasman Sea Tsunamis?. Available online: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/363533716_Earthquake_generated_T_phases_on_BRS_Seismograph_Brisbane_Q’ld-_a_predictor_for_Tasman_Sea_Tsunamis.

2. UNESCO (2023, March 14). What You Need to Know about Education for Sustainable Development (Cited 7-04-2023). Available online: https://www.unesco.org/en/education-sustainable-development/need-know.

3. Ough, T. (2023, April 14). The Phones that Detect Earthquakes. (Cited 15-4-2023) BBC Future. Available online: https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20230405-the-phones-that-detect-earthquakes.

4. Sambridge, M., Millar, M.S., and Salmon, M. (2023, June 27). The Australian Seismometers in Schools Network (AuSIS). Available online: https://earthsciences.anu.edu.au/australian-seismometers-schools-network-ausis.

5. Potvin, Y. (2011). A Community Based Seismic System for Obtaining Regional and Local Seismic Data of Strategic Importance, Strategic Versus Tactical Approaches in Mining, Australian Centre for Geomechanics.

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