Earthquakes in the Shadows: Why Aftershocks Occur in Surprising Locations
Description:
For decades there has been a debate about the relative effects of dynamic versus static stress triggering of aftershocks. According to the static Coulomb stress change hypothesis, aftershocks should not occur in stress shadows, regions where static Coulomb stress has been reduced. We show that static stress shadows substantially influence aftershock occurrence following three M≥7 California mainshocks. Within the modeled static Coulomb stress shadows the aftershock rate is an order of magnitude lower than in the modeled increase regions. However, the earthquake rate in the stress shadows does not decrease below the background rate as predicted by Coulomb stress change models. Aftershocks in the stress shadows exhibit different spatial-temporal characteristics from aftershocks in the stress increase regions. The aftershock rate in the stress shadows decays as a power law with distance from the mainshock, consistent with a simple model of dynamic stress triggering. These aftershocks begin with a burst of activity during the first few days after the mainshock, also consistent with dynamic stress triggering. Our interpretation is that aftershock sequences are the combined result of static and dynamic stress triggering, with an estimated ~34% of aftershocks due to dynamic triggering and ~66% due to static triggering.
Session: New Observations and Modeling of Triggered Seismicity
Type: Oral
Date: 4/19/2023
Presentation Time: 05:30 PM (local time)
Presenting Author: Jeanne L. Hardebeck
Student Presenter: No
Invited Presentation:
Authors
Jeanne Hardebeck Presenting Author Corresponding Author jhardebeck@usgs.gov U.S. Geological Survey |
Ruth Harris harris@usgs.gov U.S. Geological Survey |
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Earthquakes in the Shadows: Why Aftershocks Occur in Surprising Locations
Category
New Observations and Modeling of Triggered Seismicity