Fifteen Years of Continuous High-Resolution Borehole Strainmeter Measurements in Eastern Taiwan: An Overview and Perspectives
Journal article, 2021

As one of the most sensitive instruments for deformation monitoring in geophysics, borehole strainmeter has the capability to record a large spectrum of tectonic and environmental signals. Sensors are usually deployed near active faults and volcanoes and provide high-resolution continuous recordings of seismic and aseismic signals, hydrological variations (rainfall, groundwater level) and natural hazards (tropical cyclones, landslides, tsunamis). On the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the installation of the first Sacks–Evertson borehole strainmeter, in central Japan, we present an overview of the major scientific contributions and advances enabled by borehole strainmeter measurements in Taiwan since their installation in the mid 2000s. We also propose a set of future research directions that address recent challenges in seismology, hydrology and crustal strain modeling.

seismic source modeling

Taiwan

high-resolution monitoring

borehole strainmeter

infrasound

tidal calibration

aseismic deformation

stress modeling

crustal deformation

tropical typhoon

Author

Alexandre Canitano

Academia Sinica

Maxime Mouyen

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Onsala Space Observatory

Ya-Ju Hsu

Academia Sinica

Alan Linde

Carnegie Institution of Washington

Selwyn Sacks

Carnegie Institution of Washington

Hsin-Ming Lee

Academia Sinica

GeoHazards

2624795X (eISSN)

Vol. 2 3 172-195

Subject Categories

Geophysics

Geosciences, Multidisciplinary

DOI

10.3390/geohazards2030010

More information

Latest update

4/2/2024 1