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Mian Liu, Gang Luo, Hui Wang, Seth Stein. 2014: Long aftershock sequences in North China and Central US:implications for hazard assessment in mid-continents. Earthquake Science, 27(1): 27-35. DOI: 10.1007/s11589-014-0066-z
Citation: Mian Liu, Gang Luo, Hui Wang, Seth Stein. 2014: Long aftershock sequences in North China and Central US:implications for hazard assessment in mid-continents. Earthquake Science, 27(1): 27-35. DOI: 10.1007/s11589-014-0066-z

Long aftershock sequences in North China and Central US:implications for hazard assessment in mid-continents

  • Because seismic activity within mid-continents is usually much lower than that along plate boundary zones, even small earthquakes can cause widespread concerns, especially when these events occur in the source regions of previous large earthquakes. However, these small earthquakes may be just aftershocks that continue for decades or even longer. The recent seismicity in the Tangshan region in North China is likely aftershocks of the 1976 Great Tangshan earthquake. The current earthquake sequence in the New Madrid seismic zone in central United States, which includes a cluster of <i<M</i< ~ 7.0 events in 1811-1812 and a number of similar events in the past millennium, is believed to result from recent fault reactivation that releases pre-stored strain energy in the crust. If so, this earthquake sequence is similar to aftershocks in that the rates of energy release should decay with time and the sequence of earthquakes will eventually end. We use simple physical analysis and numerical simulations to show that the current sequence of large earthquakes in the New Madrid fault zone is likely ending or has ended. Recognizing that mid-continental earthquakes have long aftershock sequences and complex spatiotemporal occurrences are critical to improve hazard assessments.
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