Using newly refined analysis methods, scientists have discovered that a North Koreanย nuclearย bomb test last fall set off aftershocks over a period of eight months. The shocks, which occurred onย a previouslyย unmappedย nearby fault,ย areย a window into both the physics of nuclear explosions, and how natural earthquakes can be triggered. The findings are described in two papers just published online in the journal Seismological Research Letters.
The September 3, 2017 underground test wasย North Koreaโs sixth, and by far largest yet, yieldingย some 250 kilotons, or about 17 times the size of the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima. Many experts believe the device was a hydrogen bombโif true, a significant advance from cruder atomic devices the regimeย previously exploded.ย The explosion itselfย produced a magnitude 6.3 earthquake. This was followedย 8.5 minutes later by a magnitude 4 quake, apparentlyย created whenย an area above the test site on the countryโs Mt. Mantap collapsed intoย an underground cavity occupied by the bomb.

The test andย collapse were picked up by seismometers around the world and widely reported at the time. But later, without fanfare, seismic stations run by China, South Korea and the United Statesย picked up 10 smaller shocks, all apparently scatteredย within 5 or 10 kilometers around the test site. The first two came on Sept. 23, 2017; the most recent was April 22, 2018. Scientistsย assumed the bomb had shaken upย the earth, and it was taking a while to settle back down.ย โItโs not likely that there would be so many events in that small area over a small period of time,โ said the lead author of one of the studies, Won-Young Kim, a seismologist at Columbia Universityโs Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. โThese are probably triggered due to the explosion.โ
After looking at the series ofย aftershock reports, Kimโs group sifted more closely through the data and spotted three other aftershocks that had not previously been recognized, for a total of 13. The tremors were all modest, all between magnitude 2.1 and 3.4, and almost certainly harmless. In the past they would have been hard to pick out usingย far-off seismometers, he said. However, under new international cooperation agreements, he and colleagues obtainedย recordings from relatively nearbyย instruments including ones inย Ussuriysk, Russia, a borehole in South Korea, andย Mudanjiang, northeast China.
The groupย then used a new analysis method developed in part by Lamont seismologist David Schaff that looks at energy waves that are much lower frequency andย slower-moving seismicย than those used in conventional earthquake analyses. These slow-moving wavesย allowed Schaff and the rest of the team to pinpoint the locations of the quakes with far greater precision than with conventional recordings. Instead ofย the random scatter initially seen, the quake locations lined up inย a neat 700-meter-long row about 5 kilometers northwest of the blastโindication of a hidden fracture.
Seismometers have long been routinely used toย verify nuclear test treaties, and scientists have become increasingly confident that they can detect even small tests and distinguish themย from natural earthquakes. But the link between explosions and subsequent quakes is less studied. Seismologists documented a handful ofย apparentย aftershocks near a Nevada test site in the 1970s, and near a Soviet test site in Kazakhstan in 1989. However,ย they were notย able to pinpointย the locations of these quakes with the technology then available. With more instruments and the new analysis method, โnow we can seeย everything,โ saidย Paul Richards, a Lamont seismologist who coauthored the papers. โItโs a radical improvement in cataloging even tiny, tiny earthquakes. It shows not just what we can do with natural earthquakes, but that we can monitor what the North Koreans are doing. North Korea canโt do anything at all now [in secret] and expect to get away with it.โ
Richards said the exact location of tiny quakesย could also help inย the so far largely fruitlessย quest by some seismologistsย to predict bigger quakes. Richards did not assert that quakes could eventually be predicted, but said, โIf youโre ever going to do this, you have to understand locations, and how one earthquake affects its neighbors.โ
This spring, the North Koreans made a show of blowing up part of the Mt. Mantap site, though it may already have become largely unusable due to theย destruction caused by previous explosions.ย And no nuclear tests have been detected since North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and U.S. president Donald Trump met in June to discussย ending North Koreaโs tests. However, despite boasts by Trump that North Koreaโs program has been neutralized, U.S. diplomats have noted evidence suggesting that the North continues to quietly develop its weapons.
Lamont scientists have studied previous North Korean tests, including ones in 2013 and 2009; they concluded that reports of one in 2010 was a false alarm. The current studies were coauthored by Eunyoung Jo and Yonggyu Ryoo of the Korea Meteorological Administration.




It is interesting to see the association between nuclear testing and seismic activity. I always thought that the Qom earthquake in Iran was somehow related to nuclear testing, but unfortunately no open source information was available. It just seems logical that an impact against the tectonic plates would affect those plates.
Should be a known fact that nuclear testing causes earthquakes. Study the 1940-1990 timeline and make connections between earthquakes and nuclear testing. An example is the Vrancea 7.2 in the year 1977, coincidental with the focus of the Soviet Nuclear Testing. Do the knowledge and make strong articles. Nuclear testing must be banned 4 ever. Peace!
correct me if I am off base from what I observed it knocked the earth off it’s axis by 1/8 of a degree briefly some hoe I have seen a domino effect since we have to remember the new age weapons of mass destruction have more power than we can ever imagine they dam sure ain’t weapons from the 50s……….