Periodicity and Clustering in the Long-Term Earthquake Record

被引:29
|
作者
Griffin, Jonathan D. [1 ,2 ]
Stirling, Mark W. [1 ]
Wang, Ting [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Otago, Dept Geol, Dunedin, New Zealand
[2] Geosci Australia, Community Safety Branch, Symonston, ACT, Australia
[3] Univ Otago, Dept Math & Stat, Dunedin, New Zealand
关键词
earthquake interevent times; clustering; periodicity; paleoseismology; SAN-ANDREAS FAULT; NEW-ZEALAND; MEGATHRUST; RUPTURE; SLIP; PALEOSEISMICITY; SUPERCYCLES; RECURRENCE; BEHAVIOR; HAZARD;
D O I
10.1029/2020GL089272
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Elastic rebound theory forms the basis of the standard earthquake cycle model and predicts large earthquakes to recur regularly through cycles of strain accumulation and release. Yet few individual earthquake records are sufficiently long to test the theory. Here we characterize the distribution of earthquake interevent times from a global compilation of 80 long-term records. We find that large earthquakes recur more regularly than a random Poisson process on individual fault segments. The majority of Earth's well-studied faults shows weakly periodic and uncorrelated large earthquake recurrence, consistent with the expectations of elastic rebound theory. However, many low activity-rate (annual occurrence rates < 2 x 10(-4)) faults show random or clustered earthquake recurrence, which cannot be explained by elastic rebound theory.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] LONG-TERM EARTHQUAKE CLUSTERING
    KAGAN, YY
    JACKSON, DD
    GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL, 1991, 104 (01) : 117 - 133
  • [2] Earthquake supercycles and Long-Term Fault Memory
    Salditch, Leah
    Stein, Seth
    Neely, James
    Spencer, Bruce D.
    Brooks, Edward M.
    Agnon, Amotz
    Liu, Mian
    TECTONOPHYSICS, 2020, 774
  • [3] Evidence for periodicity and nonlinearity in a high-resolution fossil record of long-term evolution
    Prokoph, A
    Fowler, AD
    Patterson, RT
    GEOLOGY, 2000, 28 (10) : 867 - 870
  • [4] On the long-term periodicity of seismic activation in the Caucasus-East Anatolian region
    E. A. Rogozhin
    N. V. Kulanin
    Seismic Instruments, 2015, 51 (2) : 141 - 145
  • [5] On the Long-Term Periodicity of Seismic Activation in the Caucasus-East Anatolian Region
    Rogozhin, E. A.
    Kulanin, N. V.
    SEISMIC INSTRUMENTS, 2015, 51 (02) : 141 - 145
  • [6] Surface cracks record long-term seismic segmentation of the Andean margin
    Loveless, John P.
    Allmendinger, Richard W.
    Pritchard, Matthew E.
    Garroway, Jordan L.
    Gonzalez, Gabriel
    GEOLOGY, 2009, 37 (01) : 23 - 26
  • [7] Revisiting California's Past Great Earthquakes and Long-Term Earthquake Rate
    Hough, Susan E.
    Page, Morgan
    Salditch, Leah
    Gallahue, Molly M.
    Lucas, Madeleine C.
    Neely, James S.
    Stein, Seth
    BULLETIN OF THE SEISMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 2021, 111 (01) : 356 - 370
  • [8] A More Realistic Earthquake Probability Model Using Long-Term Fault Memory
    Neely, James S.
    Salditch, Leah
    Spencer, Bruce D.
    Stein, Seth
    BULLETIN OF THE SEISMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 2023, 113 (02) : 843 - 855
  • [9] Nature Inspired Concepts in Long-Term Electrocardiogram Clustering
    Bursa, M.
    Lhotska, L.
    4TH EUROPEAN CONFERENCE OF THE INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION FOR MEDICAL AND BIOLOGICAL ENGINEERING, 2009, 22 (1-3): : 322 - 325
  • [10] Poisson Behavior Leads to Bias When Testing for Periodicity in the Paleoseismic Record of Large Earthquakes
    Williams, Randolph T.
    SEISMOLOGICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2022, 93 (01) : 118 - 125