نتایج جستجو برای: earthquake seismicity background and various faults

تعداد نتایج: 16886307  

2016
T. H. W. Goebel S. M. Hosseini F. Cappa E. Hauksson J. P. Ampuero F. Aminzadeh J. B. Saleeby

Fracture and fault zones can channel fluid flow and transmit injection-induced pore pressure changes over large distances (>km), at which seismicity is rarely suspected to be human induced. We use seismicity analysis and hydrogeological models to examine the role of seismically active faults in inducing earthquakes. We analyze a potentially injection-induced earthquake swarm with three events a...

2005
Allen L. Husker Emily E. Brodsky

We present a case study of dynamically triggered seismicity in Idaho and western Montana from the 2002 MW 7.9 Denali fault earthquake to investigate the relationship between measured geological discriminants and propensity for triggering. We first establish triggering. We find events that are not reported in the Advanced National Seismic System catalog in Idaho and Yellowstone following the Den...

Background and objective: numerous seismic hazard analysis studies are conducted annually using probabilistic methods throughout the world and Iran, which are usually different from the initial assumptions of analysis or software used. On the other hand, many researches are presented every year about new methods of earthquake hazard zoning, but so far these studies have not computed earthquake ...

2017
S. M. S. P. Dev

Background: Earthquake-prone regions from the stable continental regions (like Peninsular India) warrant total seismic hazard estimation from possible sources — reservoir induced or tectonic. The Koyna region falls in the so-called stable continental region, though previously considered as aseismic because of its location in the Peninsular India, which was argued to be the continental Shield re...

2007
Egill Hauksson Jeffrey Unruh

[1] We synthesize the tectonics of the southern Walker Lane belt and Coso Range in central eastern California using regional earthquake data. First, we invert for threedimensional models of the Vp and Vp /Vs structure of the upper and middle crust. Using these models, we also determine three-dimensional Vs and Poisson’s ratio models. The changes in seismic velocities across the region are small...

2017
Maria Beatrice Magnani Michael L Blanpied Heather R DeShon Matthew J Hornbach

To assess whether recent seismicity is induced by human activity or is of natural origin, we analyze fault displacements on high-resolution seismic reflection profiles for two regions in the central United States (CUS): the Fort Worth Basin (FWB) of Texas and the northern Mississippi embayment (NME). Since 2009, earthquake activity in the CUS has increased markedly, and numerous publications su...

2017
Thomas H.W. Goebel Grzegorz Kwiatek Thorsten W. Becker Emily E. Brodsky Georg Dresen

Estimating the expected size of the largest earthquake on a given fault is complicated by dynamic rupture interactions in addition to geometric and stress heterogeneity. However, a statistical assessment of the potential of seismic events to grow to larger sizes may be possible based on variations in magnitude distributions. Such variations can be described by the b-value, which quantifies the ...

2002
Christian Stock Euan G. C. Smith

To develop spatially continuous seismicity models (earthquake probability distributions) from a given earthquake catalog, the method of kernel estimation has been suggested. Kernel estimations with a global (spatially invariant) bandwidth deal poorly with earthquake hypocenter distributions that have different spatially local features. For example, a typical earthquake catalog has several areas...

Journal: :Philosophical transactions. Series A, Mathematical, physical, and engineering sciences 2010
Andrea Hampel Ralf Hetzel Georgios Maniatis

Numerical models including one or more faults in a rheologically stratified lithosphere show that climate-induced variations in ice and water volumes on Earth's surface considerably affect the slip evolution of both thrust and normal faults. In general, the slip rate and hence the seismicity of a fault decreases during loading and increases during unloading. Here, we present several case studie...

2002
David P. Schaff Götz H. R. Bokelmann Gregory C. Beroza Felix Waldhauser William L. Ellsworth

[1] By measuring relative earthquake arrival times using waveform cross correlation and locating earthquakes using the double difference technique, we are able to reduce hypocentral errors by 1 to 2 orders of magnitude over routine locations for nearly 8000 events along a 35-km section of the Calaveras Fault. This represents 92% of all seismicity since 1984 and includes the rupture zone of the ...

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