A USO – or ‘unidentified seismic event’ – baffled scientists, sparking a global hunt for its source

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Published: Monday, 16 September 2024 at 13:51 PM


Across the world in September 2023, for more than a week, tiny ground vibrations echoed beneath our feet. Although imperceptible to humans, seismic stations detected the unusual signal, which resonated from the Arctic to Antarctica.

“When I first saw the seismic signal, I was completely baffled,” says Dr Stephen Hicks from UCL Earth Sciences, who co-led a global team of 68 scientists to solve the puzzle.

The team discovered the source of this mysterious nine-day-long tremor was not an earthquake but a mega-tsunami in a remote, uninhabited part of Greenland. A massive landslide had sent waves crashing through Dickson Fjord, generating a strange, monotonous hum that resonated through the Earth’s crust.

“Even though we know seismometers can record a variety of sources happening on Earth’s surface, never before has such a long-lasting, globally travelling seismic wave, containing only a single frequency of oscillation, been recorded,” says Hicks.