J
Jean Letort
Researcher at Paul Sabatier University
Publications - 12
Citations - 229
Jean Letort is an academic researcher from Paul Sabatier University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Induced seismicity & Aftershock. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 12 publications receiving 136 citations. Previous affiliations of Jean Letort include École Normale Supérieure.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Drainage of a deep magma reservoir near Mayotte inferred from seismicity and deformation
Simone Cesca,Jean Letort,Hoby N. T. Razafindrakoto,Sebastian Heimann,Eleonora Rivalta,Marius Isken,Mehdi Nikkhoo,Luigi Passarelli,Gesa Petersen,Fabrice Cotton,Torsten Dahm +10 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed regional and global seismic and deformation data to provide a one-year-long detailed picture of a deep, rare magmatic process and identified about 7,000 volcano-tectonic earthquakes and 407 very-long-period seismic signals.
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The 2012 May 20 and 29, Emilia earthquakes (Northern Italy) and the main aftershocks: S-wave attenuation, acceleration source functions and site effects
Raúl R. Castro,Francesca Pacor,Rodolfo Puglia,Gabriele Ameri,Jean Letort,Marco Massa,Lucia Luzi +6 more
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Automatic analysis of the Gorkha earthquake aftershock sequence: evidences of structurally segmented seismicity
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the first 3 months of aftershock activity following the 2015 April 25 Gorkha earthquake M w 7.8 recorded on the Nepalese Seismic network.
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Lateral variations of the midcrustal seismicity in western Nepal: Seismotectonic implications
R. Hoste-Colomer,Laurent Bollinger,Hélène Lyon-Caen,L. B. Adhikari,C. Baillard,A. Benoit,Mukunda Bhattarai,Ratna Mani Gupta,Eric Jacques,T. Kandel,Bharat Prasad Koirala,Jean Letort,K. Maharjan,R. Matrau,R. Pandey,Chintan Timsina +15 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used automatic picks, manually validated, to perform absolute and relative location of the earthquakes, and found that most earthquakes occur within the hanging wall of the Main Himalayan Thrust fault nearby ramps or suspected contacts between Lesser Himalayan slivers.
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A new, improved and fully automatic method for teleseismic depth estimation of moderate earthquakes (4.5 < M < 5.5): application to the Guerrero subduction zone (Mexico)
TL;DR: In this article, the spectral holes in the shape of the signal spectrum were used to detect surface reflected (pP, sP) waves in a signal at teleseismic distances.