Date: 4/19/2021
Session Time: 2:00 PM to 3:15 PM Pacific
New Insights Into the Preparatory Phase of Earthquakes From Tectonic, Field and Lab Experiments
Earthquake prediction and forecasting has been a great scientific challenge for many decades. When reviewing the historical developments around the world, we find that advances in our understanding of the predictability of earthquakes emerge from detailed analyses of new datasets and types of significant earthquakes as well as statistical research, model developments, lab and field experiments. Recently, new constraints have been placed on the earthquake preparation and nucleation phase from detailed observations of foreshocks, aseismic slip before subduction zone earthquakes, seismic slip nucleation in the lab and from statistical analyses of seismicity. Particularly strong constraints can emerge from experiments to catch large earthquakes in the act, such as the Parkfield, California, Earthquake Prediction Site of the U.S. Geological Survey and more recently the China Seismic Experimental Site (CSES) of the China Earthquake Administration. By using the seismically active Sichuan-Yunnan region as a natural observatory, CSES plans to foster an international and interdisciplinary cooperation on fundamental research in continental earthquakes.
In this session, we welcome contributions that illuminate or constrain the earthquake preparation phase from across the scales, from lab and field scales to global studies, and across the disciplines, including seismology, geodesy, geophysics and numerical modelling to experimental rock mechanics. We seek presentations that either develop new hypotheses (in exploratory research) or aim to test existing hypotheses (in confirmatory research). We also welcome contributions that leverage data science, including artificial intelligence, big data or cloud computing, to advance earthquake predictability research.
Joint SSC-SSA Session
Conveners
Zhigang Peng, Georgia Institute of Technology (zpeng@gatech.edu)
Yongxian Zhang, China Earthquake Administration (yxzhseis@sina.com)
Maximilian Werner, University of Bristol (max.werner@bristol.ac.uk)
Vladimir Kossobokov, Russian Academy of Sciences (volodya@mitp.ru)
John E. Ebel, Boston College (john.ebel.1@bc.edu)
Weijun Wang, China Earthquake Administration (wjwang@cea-ies.ac.cn)
Oral Presentations
Participant Role | Details | Start Time | Minutes | Action |
---|---|---|---|---|
Submission | Localization of Seismicity Prior to Large Earthquakes | 02:00 PM | 15 | View |
Submission | Investigating Potential Earthquake Preparatory Phase From Short-Term and Long-Term Seismic Observations | 02:15 PM | 15 | View |
Submission | Learning the Low Frequency Earthquake Activity on the Central San Andreas Fault | 02:30 PM | 15 | View |
Submission | Using Recent M≥4 Seismicity to Estimate the Locations of Future M≥6.7 Earthquakes | 02:45 PM | 15 | View |
Submission | Seismic Gap of Moderate Earthquakes, A Likely Typical Medium-Term Precursor Prior to Large Earthquakes Above M7 in the Joint Region of Southeast Tibet, West Sichuan and Northwest Yunan | 03:00 PM | 15 | View |
Total: | 75 Minute(s) |
New Insights Into the Preparatory Phase of Earthquakes From Tectonic, Field and Lab Experiments II
Description
Type: Oral
Date: 4/19/2021
Time: 2:00 PM to 3:15 PM Pacific