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Estimating the seismicity from geological structure for seismic-risk studies

John G. Anderson
- 01 Feb 1979 - 
- Vol. 69, Iss: 1, pp 135-158
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TLDR
In this paper, a review of geological literature has provided preliminary estimates of slip rates on many important faults and the estimates of the seismicity resulting from these slip rates are consistent with historical records of earthquake occurrences for southern California taken as a whole.
Abstract
Starting with geological data, this paper estimates the seismicity for applications in seismic risk studies. The rate at which seismic moment is released can be estimated on a fault when the slip rate is known. It can also be estimated in a region of crustal convergence (without subduction) or divergence when the rate at which opposite sides of the zone are converging or the regional strain rate is known. Then, provided all of the deformation is released seismically, by assuming the relative frequency of different sizes of earthquakes, the absolute frequency of events can be obtained. The procedure is used to estimate seismicity in southern California. A review of geological literature has provided preliminary estimates of slip rates on many important faults. The estimates of the seismicity resulting from these slip rates are consistent with historical records of earthquake occurrences for southern California taken as a whole. For smaller regions or individual faults in southern California, the seismicity estimated from slip rates may differ from historical rates of seismicity by a factor of two or more. In the western basin and range region, the historical seismicity is also consistent with an estimate for the strain rate. Because of this agreement in larger regions, where many faults are involved, it is inferred that the geological data is also useful for studies of smaller regions, even though on this scale the model cannot be tested because of the too short historical record of earthquake occurrences.

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Citations
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Fault behavior and characteristic earthquakes: Examples from the Wasatch and San Andreas Fault Zones

TL;DR: In this article, an analysis of scarp-derived colluvium in trench exposures across the Wasatch fault provides estimates of the timing and displacement associated with individual surface faulting earthquakes.
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Peak horizontal acceleration and velocity from strong motion records including records from the 1979 Imperial Valley, California, earthquake

TL;DR: In this paper, a magnitude-independent shape based on geometrical spreading and anelastic attenuation was proposed for the attenuation curve, which decouples the determination of the distance dependence of the data from the magnitude dependence.
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Peak horizontal acceleration and velocity from strong-motion records including records from the 1979 imperial valley, California, earthquake

TL;DR: In this paper, a magnitude-independent shape based on geometrical spreading and anelastic attenuation was proposed for the attenuation curve, which decouples the determination of the distance dependence of the data from the magnitude dependence.
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Continental fault structure and the shallow earthquake source

TL;DR: A simple 2-level model for these important structures accounts for the depth distribution of most continental earthquakes, and for the observed range of faulting styles and associated rock deformation textures as mentioned in this paper.
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The Gutenberg-Richter or characteristic earthquake distribution, which is it?

TL;DR: In this paper, the shape of the magnitude-frequency distribution along the major strike-slip faults of southern California is examined using the CIT-USGS catalog for the period 1944 to 1992.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Engineering seismic risk analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce a method for the evaluation of the seismic risk at the site of an engineering project, in terms of a ground motion parameter (such as peak acceleration) versus average return period.
Journal ArticleDOI

The energy release in great earthquakes

TL;DR: In this paper, a new magnitude scale M_w is defined in terms of W_0 through the standard energy-magnitude relation log W_ 0 = 1.5M_w + 11.8.
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Implications of Plate Tectonics for the Cenozoic Tectonic Evolution of Western North America

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the history of plate motions between the American and Pacific plates in the late Cenozoic and found that the two plates were fixed with respect to one another until 5 m.y.
Journal ArticleDOI

Marine magnetic anomalies, geomagnetic field reversals, and motions of the ocean floor and continents

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the geomagnetic anomalies are caused by a sequence of normally and reversely magnetized blocks that have been produced by sea floor spreading at the axes of the ridge in the Pacific, Atlantic, and Indian oceans.
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