Foreshock Occurrence Rates before Large Earthquakes Worldwide (original) (raw)
Abstract
—Global rates of foreshock occurrence involving shallow _M_≥ 6 and _M_≥ 7 mainshocks and _M_≥ 5 foreshocks were measured, using earthquakes listed in the Harvard CMT catalog for the period 1978–1996. These rates are similar to rates ones measured in previous worldwide and regional studies when they are normalized for the ranges of magnitude difference they each span. The observed worldwide rates were compared to a generic model of earthquake clustering, which is based on patterns of small and moderate aftershocks in California, and were found to exceed the California model by a factor of approximately 2. Significant differences in foreshock rate were found among subsets of earthquakes defined by their focal mechanism and tectonic region, with the rate before thrust events higher and the rate before strike-slip events lower than the worldwide average. Among the thrust events a large majority, composed of events located in shallow subduction zones, registered a high foreshock rate, while a minority, located in continental thrust belts, measured a low rate. These differences may explain why previous surveys have revealed low foreshock rates among thrust events in California (especially southern California), while the worldwide observations suggest the opposite: California, lacking an active subduction zone in most of its territory, and including a region of mountain-building thrusts in the south, reflects the low rate apparently typical for continental thrusts, while the worldwide observations, dominated by shallow subduction zone events, are foreshock-rich.
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Authors and Affiliations
- U.S. Geological Survey, 45 Middlefield Road, Menlo Park, California 94025, USA., US
P. A. Reasenberg
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Received July 31, 1998, revised/accepted December 18, 1998
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Reasenberg, P. Foreshock Occurrence Rates before Large Earthquakes Worldwide.Pure appl. geophys. 155, 355–379 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/s000240050269
- Published: 12 April 2014
- Issue date: August 1999
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s000240050269