Room: Exhibit Hall
Date: 4/16/2025
Session Time: 8:00 AM to 5:45 PM (local time)
Unusual Earthquakes and Their Implications
Many earthquakes challenge paradigms about earth mechanics and pose troubling implications for hazard and risk. Earthquakes can occur in unexpected regions: low shear-stress stable continental interiors; deep in subduction zones where high pressures and temperatures should inhibit brittle failure; and even on the Moon, Mars and other planets. Earthquakes can behave in unusual ways: ruptures can slip "backwards" or propagate in unexpected directions; large earthquakes can happen in rapid succession; or they can happen with multiple slip episodes with rupture speeds faster or slower than expected. Such events often require new physical explanations that push the boundaries of our understanding of seismogenesis and rupture propagation. They also complicate hazard and risk analyses, requiring those models to go beyond standard statistical and physical approaches. We welcome contributions on any unusual or thought-provoking earthquakes.
Conveners
Zhe Jia, University of Texas at Austin (zjia@ig.utexas.edu)
Chris Rollins, GNS Science | Te Pū Ao (c.rollins@gns.cri.nz)
Alice R. Turner, University of Texas at Austin (alice.turner@jsg.utexas.edu)
Poster Presentations
Participant Role | Details | Action |
---|---|---|
Submission | A New Perspective on the Origin of Seismic and Tectonic Activity of the Sichuan Basin, Central China | View |
Submission | Surface Rupture From an Aftershock: Remote Observations From the January 2024 Wushi (Aykol) Earthquakes, China | View |
Submission | Deciphering the Multi-fault System of the 2024 Mw 7.4 Hualien, Taiwan Earthquake Using Combined Seismic, Geodetic and Insar Datasets | View |
Submission | Implications of a Reverse Polarity Earthquake Pair on Fault Friction and Stress Heterogeneity Near Ridgecrest, California | View |
Submission | Deep Lithospheric Rupture and Dual-mechanism Transition During the 2024 Mw 7.4 Calama Earthquake, Chile | View |
Submission | Tidally Modulated Icequakes Along a Ross Ice Shelf Rift in Antarctica | View |
Unusual Earthquakes and Their Implications [Poster]
Description