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      The role of stress transfer in earthquake occurrence

      Nature
      Springer Nature

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          A constitutive law for rate of earthquake production and its application to earthquake clustering

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            New evidence on the state of stress of the san andreas fault system.

            Contemporary in situ tectonic stress indicators along the San Andreas fault system in central California show northeast-directed horizontal compression that is nearly perpendicular to the strike of the fault. Such compression explains recent uplift of the Coast Ranges and the numerous active reverse faults and folds that trend nearly parallel to the San Andreas and that are otherwise unexplainable in terms of strike-slip deformation. Fault-normal crustal compression in central California is proposed to result from the extremely low shear strength of the San Andreas and the slightly convergent relative motion between the Pacific and North American plates. Preliminary in situ stress data from the Cajon Pass scientific drill hole (located 3.6 kilometers northeast of the San Andreas in southern California near San Bernardino, California) are also consistent with a weak fault, as they show no right-lateral shear stress at approximately 2-kilometer depth on planes parallel to the San Andreas fault.
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              Seismicity remotely triggered by the magnitude 7.3 landers, california, earthquake.

              The magnitude 7.3 Landers earthquake of 28 June 1992 triggered a remarkably sudden and widespread increase in earthquake activity across much of the western United States. The triggered earthquakes, which occurred at distances up to 1250 kilometers (17 source dimensions) from the Landers mainshock, were confined to areas of persistent seismicity and strike-slip to normal faulting. Many of the triggered areas also are sites of geothermal and recent volcanic activity. Static stress changes calculated for elastic models of the earthquake appear to be too small to have caused the triggering. The most promising explanations involve nonlinear interactions between large dynamic strains accompanying seismic waves from the mainshock and crustal fluids (perhaps including crustal magma).
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Nature
                Nature
                Springer Nature
                0028-0836
                December 9 1999
                December 9 1999
                : 402
                : 6762
                : 605-609
                Article
                10.1038/45144
                343a0947-d4ee-41e0-82a4-b629363adcfa
                © 1999
                History

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