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Vancouver Island’s ‘tectonic dance’ revealed by hundreds of tiny tremors

Jun 20, 2018 | 1:37 PM

VICTORIA — Hundreds of tiny tremors, felt only by sensitive monitors, have shivered under southern Vancouver Island in the last 48 hours, leading one scientist to predict they may signal what he calls a “tectonic dance.”

John Cassidy, an earthquake seismologist with Natural Resources Canada, says the shaking has most of the hallmarks of a so-called episodic tremor and slip, a process that occurs along the fault lines at the edges of tectonic plates.

The plate below Vancouver Island is edging eastward under the North American plate creating forces that could cause a major earthquake, but Cassidy says these little tremors are not a sign that a large quake is on the way.

Instead, he says this event, discovered about 15 years ago, happens almost annually and ends with a slip that isn’t felt by humans, but moves the entire Island westward by as much as five millimetres.