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America’s 'ringing' rock arches recorded | America’s 'ringing' rock arches recorded |
(5 months later) | |
Scientists are listening to the hum of America's great rock arches to keep a check on their integrity. | Scientists are listening to the hum of America's great rock arches to keep a check on their integrity. |
These geological wonders adorn the Colorado Plateau in the southwestern US - not to mention the desktop wallpapers of countless computers worldwide. | |
By attaching seismometers to the sandstone structures, researchers can measure their modes of resonance. | |
Tracking changes through time could highlight any new weaknesses in the rock that might herald a collapse. | |
There is nothing anyone can do about this - the arches are created and destroyed by erosion. It's the natural order. | |
But an alert to potential danger might be useful to the National Park Service as it manages the many visitors who come to marvel at these imposing forms. | |
"They're very impressive - global icons that are super-rare, delicate and of course very beautiful," says Dr Jeff Moore. | |
The University of Utah researcher is presenting his team's work at the American Geophysical Union's Fall Meeting in San Francisco this week. | |
The group has been attaching a clutch of sensors - not just seismometers, but tiltmeters and temperature probes - to some of the state's most spectacular arches. | |
These include the Landscape, Double-O and Mesa structures. Dr Moore and colleagues are "listening" to them ring. | |
The arches are excited by the wind and by natural Earth noise, such as distant ocean waves. | |
What the scientists have found is that each structure has its own characteristic resonance, or modes of resonance. | |
These modes are a function of an arch's material properties - its rock mass and bulk stiffness. | |
"If something were to change in an arch - like a developing crack - this would be reflected in a change in the vibrational characteristics," Dr Moore explained. | |
"So for Landscape Arch, which is the longest arch in North America at 88m long - we seem to have a fundamental resonant frequency at about 1.8Hz. | |
"Let's say there was damage on some side of it or internally that we couldn't see - that resonant frequency is expected to drop," he told BBC News. | |
Rock falls in 1991 and 1993 mean that Landscape Arch is now out of bounds. Certainly, no-one is allowed to walk on it anymore. | |
What the Utah team has done is develop a non-invasive diagnostic tool to monitor its ongoing status. | |
Its sensors are small and mobile, with the seismometer being just a bit bigger than a coffee mug. The instruments are placed simply on the surface of the arch for a few hours to allow the vibrations and a few other parameters to be recorded, before the whole suite is then removed. | |
"The idea is similar to 'wheel-tapping' in old-time train stations, if you like," said Dr Moore. | |
"These guys would tap the steel wheel and if there was a crack, they'd hear that change. | |
"The field is very well established in civil engineering; it's called structural health monitoring. We're just the first to extend that to natural rock arches." | |
There are more than 2,000 arches in Utah's Arches National Park. It has the perfect conditions for their creation. | |
These include a porous sandstone unit that has been juxtaposed atop a very dense one. A salt dome also pushes up from below, which has had the effect of introducing weakness in the overlying rock. | |
This combination of factors initiates a process of erosion that favours undermining and the growth of an arch structure. All it takes are the elements and time. | |
"We see all stages of arch development, from incipient new formation to collapse," Dr Moore told BBC News. | |
"We had Wall Arch famously collapse in 2008, and Landscape Arch we think is really near the end of its life. | |
"Double-O, on the other hand, although it is very well formed, it seems to have pretty thick abutments and strong spans. So that looks OK." | |
Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos | Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos |
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