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A fellow of the American Geophysical Union and the Geological Society
of America, Paul Silver also serves on many committees and boards. He
is president-elect of the Seismology Section of the American Geophysical
Union. Silver has also taken a lead role in the conception, development,
and ultimate funding of the Plate Boundary Observatory (PBO), an initiative
to monitor and understand the Earth’s movements and earthquakes between
the North American and the Pacific plates.

By combining data on surface deformation and seismic anisotropy (see text
at right), Silver is able to estimate the mantle flow field beneath western
North America. Shown are the directions of fast shear wave polarization
directions predicted from a best-fitting flow model at sites where shear
wave splitting has been measured. White symbols denote good fits of predicted
and observed directions; red shows sites where predicted directions are
more than 14° clockwise than observed; blue indicates a similar counterclockwise
misfit. In the best-fitting model the mantle moves eastward at 5.5 ±
1.5 centimeters per year, opposite to the motion of the North American
plate. (Reprinted with permission from Science 295, 1055. Copyright 2002
AAAS.)
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How are earthquakes triggered, and how do they interact with each other?
Geophysicist Paul Silver believes that by observing the slow redistribution
of stress and strain that accompanies earthquakes he can help answer these
questions. Silver uses several approaches to detect and characterize slow
deformation. He also studies seismic anisotropy — the fact that seismic
wave velocity depends on the direction and polarization of the waves as
they propagate through a material. Because seismic anisotropy is produced
by deformation and flow in the Earth’s mantle, Silver uses the phenomenon
to understand how the mantle is involved in mountain building, to map
convection in the mantle, and to study how this flow interacts with the
tectonic plates.
Silver and colleagues assembled an unprecedented 10- year
data set on the strain behavior of a portion of the San Andreas Fault
in central California — an area that is expected to experience a
magnitude 6 earthquake soon. The strain records show that slow motion
on the fault began to speed up in 1993, which started a complex multiyear
slow earthquake involving the redistribution of stress along the fault
and four moderate size earthquakes. It is the best-documented slow earthquake
so far observed. Through especially sensitive seismic imaging of the crust,
Silver and team also found that fluid in the fault zone was redistributed
in association with the slow earthquake.
The magnitude 7.3 Landers, California, earthquake of 1992
triggered increased levels of seismic activity in regions as far as several
hundred kilometers away. By investigating all of the earthquakes in these
areas over time, Silver and collaborators found that an elevated state
of earthquake activity persisted for five years. They also discovered
that the triggered activity had an annual cycle: fall had the greatest
number of earthquakes, spring the least. The scientists concluded that
the annual variations resulted from changes in barometric pressure —
less pressure yields reduced stress on the faults, which can therefore
move more frequently.
Using several hundred global seismic stations, Silver
has also mapped the deformation of the upper mantle using a manifestation
of anisotropy known as shear-wave splitting, or birefringence. In addition
to showing that the mantle plays a role in mountain building and continent
formation, Silver used this technique to study the flow associated with
mantle convection beneath surface plates. With collaborators, he developed
the first method to measure this flow field directly and determined how
and why the mantle is moving in various places, including western North
America and Iceland.
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SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
- Sipkin, S., and P. G. Silver. 2003.
Characterization of the time-dependent strain field at seismogenic
depths using first-motion focal mechanisms: can changes in the regional
stress field trigger earthquakes? J. Geophys. Res., in press.
- Bjarnason, I. Th., P. G. Silver, G. Rümpker,
and S. C. Solomon. 2002. Shear wave splitting across the Iceland hotspot:
results from the ICEMELT experiment, J. Geophys. Res. 107 (B12), 10.1029/2001JB000916.
- Silver, P. G., and W. E. Holt. 2002. The mantle flow
field beneath western North America, Science 295, 1054-1057.
- Gao, S. S., P. G. Silver, and A. T. Linde. 2000.
Analysis of deformation data at Parkfield, California: detection of
a long-term strain transient, J. Geophys. Res. 105, 2955-2967.
- Gao, S. S., P. G. Silver, A. T. Linde, and I. S.
Sacks. 2000. Annual modulation of triggered seismicity following the
1992 Landers earthquake in California, Nature 406, 500-504.
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