How the UK’s tectonic past is key to its seismic present

Today I learnt something very interesting that I didn’t know before – that intraplate earthquakes in the UK mostly occur in western England and Scotland, not Ireland, eastern Scotland or southeast England (where I grew up).

The cause of this is that the lithosphere in that region is thinner – 80 km rather than around 100 km – and presumably weaker; I have written before about how intraplate earthquakes tend to be focussed in regions of relative weakness within the plate, where the strain rate is higher.

Two maps of the area encompassed by the United Kingdom. On the left, earthquakes are plotted as circles, with larger red and purple circles representing larger earthquakes and smaller yellow and orange circles representing smaller ones. The earthquakes are concentrated in southwest England, Wales and Western Scotland, with relatively few outside this area. On the right, estimated thickness of the lithosphere in the same region is plotted, with red regions being relatively thin and blue regions relatively thick. The red/thin region is in the same area as the area where more earthquakes are occurring.
The record of seismic activity in the UK (left) compared to the thickness of the underlying lithosphere (right). Source: Sergei Lebedev

As for what is causing this variation in lithospheric thickness, there is a fairly good correspondence between the thinned lithosphere and extent of the British Tertiary Igneous Province – the UK part of the North Atlantic Igneous Province, a region of widespread (probably mantle plume related) volcanic activity that accompanied the rifting of the North Atlantic Ocean around 55 million years ago. Since lithospheric mantle is just sufficiently cooled asthenosphere, heating = thinning.

Map of the United Kingdom showing outcrops of igneous rocks in the British Tertiary Igneous Province. These are mostly in Western Scotland - Skye, Mull, Arran - and Northern Ireland, but the Province also includes areas the Bristol Channel (Lundy)
Map of the United Kingdom showing outcrops of igneous rocks in the British Tertiary Igneous Province. Source: British Geological Society

It’s pretty cool how earthquake patterns can so tangibly reflect a deep tectonic history that played out tens of millions of years before the combination of plate motions and stresses that proximally cause them.

Of course, there are potentially damaging intraplate earthquakes outside of this region – the most destructive earthquake in the last 400 years – estimated magnitude 4.6 – had an epicentre very close to where I grew up. And whilst all of these earthquakes might seem very small in the grand scheme of things, but remember the UK is not a country that builds anything with earthquake shaking in mind, so damage from even a minor shake is potentially significant.

Categories: deep time, earthquakes, geohazards, tectonics
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