Hazard forecasting in real time: from controlled laboratory tests to volcanoes and earthquakes

Lead Research Organisation: University College London
Department Name: Earth Sciences

Abstract

The inherent predictability of brittle failure events such as earthquakes and volcanic eruptions is important, unknown, and much debated. We will establish techniques to determine the forecasting power for brittle failure in the ideal case of controlled laboratory tests, using output data from a series of experiments already funded by NERC to determine the rheology of rocks under slow deformation. We will use recent developments in informatics to enable a capability for verifiably forecasting failure in prospective mode, i.e. before it has occurred. This is important because the benefit of hindsight provides a significant positive bias in evaluating the predictability in retrospective tests. With this experience, we will then apply similar techniques to natural systems to quantify the loss of predictability in an uncontrolled, more complex system at greater spatial and temporal scales. A major technical aim is to develop an open-access, automated, web-based platform for real-time data collation, analysis and information exchange, enabling competing physical hypotheses and statistical methods to be tested and developed in fully prospective mode in an open, testable environment comparable, say, to daily weather forecasts. This will require applying state-of-the art statistical methods to the data in a user-friendly, high-performance computing environment, including formal quantification of model uncertainties and their effect on forecast consistency and quality. To ensure that the resulting techniques are practicable and formally provide value for use in hazard planning and risk mitigation, they will be developed in collaboration with recent global earthquake forecasting initiatives, monitoring observatories and civil defence agencies responsible for issuing alerts on seismic and volcanic events. The results will improve our understanding of the physical processes controlling material failure in the laboratory and in the Earth, and will provide a sustainable, experience-based tool for rigorous and fully-probabilistic forecasting of volcanic eruptions and earthquakes.

Publications

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Brantut N (2013) Time-dependent cracking and brittle creep in crustal rocks: A review in Journal of Structural Geology

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Brantut N (2014) Mechanisms of time-dependent deformation in porous limestone in Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth

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Brantut N (2014) Rate- and strain-dependent brittle deformation of rocks in Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth

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Browning J (2016) Cooling-dominated cracking in thermally stressed volcanic rocks in Geophysical Research Letters

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Chandler M (2016) Fracture toughness anisotropy in shale in Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth

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Forbes Inskip N (2018) Fracture Properties of Nash Point Shale as a Function of Orientation to Bedding in Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth

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Heap M (2011) Brittle creep in basalt and its application to time-dependent volcano deformation in Earth and Planetary Science Letters

 
Description Improved techniques for using laboratory and field data to forecast rock failure events.
Exploitation Route Within the European integration project EPOS.
Sectors Environment

 
Description Royal Society International Exchanges - cost share (China)
Amount £23,000 (GBP)
Funding ID IEC\NSFC\170625 
Organisation The Royal Society 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 03/2019 
End 03/2021
 
Description Creep collaboration 
Organisation University of Strasbourg
Country France 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Collaboration on experimental measurement of time-dependent creep in rocks. Collaboration based on complementarity of equipment and techniques between UCL and UoS. Experimental measurement of creep on large rock samples (40 mm diameter by 100 mm long) with simultaneous measurement of elastic wave velocities and acoustic emission output.
Collaborator Contribution Multiple measurements of creep in rocks on small samples (20 mm diameter by 40 mm long) as functions of condoning pressure, pore pressure, and stress. Main collaborators are Professor Patrick Baud and Dr Michael Heap.
Impact Joint publications listed elsewhere.
Start Year 2010