Microseismicity data forecast rupture area
On 28 September 2004 there was an earthquake of magnitude 6.0 at Parkfield, California. Here we show that the size distribution of the micro-earthquakes recorded in the decades before the main shock occurred allowed an accurate forecast of its eventual rupture area. Applying this approach to other w...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature (London) 2005-04, Vol.434 (7037), p.1086-1086 |
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description | On 28 September 2004 there was an earthquake of magnitude 6.0 at Parkfield, California. Here we show that the size distribution of the micro-earthquakes recorded in the decades before the main shock occurred allowed an accurate forecast of its eventual rupture area. Applying this approach to other well monitored faults should improve earthquake hazard assessment in future. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1038/4341086a |
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source | Nature; Alma/SFX Local Collection |
subjects | Aftershocks Earthquakes Fault lines Seismic activity Seismic hazard |
title | Microseismicity data forecast rupture area |
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