Abstract

Data on earthquakes in Greenland from the international and Canadian seismological bulletins have been checked against the seismograms of the seismological stations in Greenland. A few new earthquakes have also been located based on seismograms from Greenland and Canada. A total of 103 reliable earthquakes have been confirmed, located and relocated. The earthquakes occur mainly along the coasts of eastern, northern and western Greenland. The largest earthquakes in Greenland have magnitudes around 5. There is no tectonic plate boundary in Greenland. The intraplate earthquake zones in north-eastern and in northern Greenland are situated as linear continuations of the plate boundaries near the bend of the mid ocean ridge close to Station Nord, between Spitzbergen and Greenland. Under the ice cap only a few earthquakes have occurred. In eastern and in northern Greenland a few swarms of earthquakes have been found. In western Greenland a sequence of seismic signals is noticed at a distance of 17 5 km from Godhavn. Its origin may be small earthquakes. The time sequence of the earthquakes in Greenland shows two time intervals of increased earthquake activity after the two largest earthquakes. This indicates that stress adjustments in the largest earthquakes give rise to stress adjust­ments in the smaller earthquakes more than 1000 km away, in other parts of Greenland. There is only limited correlation between earthquake activity and surface geology. It can not be determined whether the main cause of the intraplate earthquakes in Greenland is isostatic uplift following the latest ice age or tectonic plate motion in connection with sea floor spreading in the Norwegian-Greenland Sea and in the Arctic Ocean.

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