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The Science of Slow Earthquakes from Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives [Poster]

Date: 4/24/2019

Time: 6:00 PM to 11:00 PM

Room: Grand Ballroom

Recognition of slow earthquake phenomena originated in Cascadia and Japan. Since the discovery of slow earthquakes, their study has continued to advance rapidly. Discussion in this joint session with Seismological Society of Japan (SSJ) is proposed to advance understanding of the phenomena not only in these two zones, but in many subduction zones around the Pacific Ocean, as well as other tectonic settings. The proximity of slow slip phenomena in subduction zones to great megathrust earthquakes highlights the importance of this topic for seismic hazard.

The goal of the session is to bring together research on slow earthquake phenomena that uses a variety of tools from seismology, geodesy, numerical modeling and laboratory studies, for various tectonic settings and spatial and temporal scales.

This session is jointly organized by the Seismological Society of Japan and SSA.

Conveners

Kazushige Obara, University of Tokyo (obara@eri.u-tokyo.ac.jp)
Kenneth C. Creager, University of Washington (kcc@uw.edu)
Heidi Houston, University of Southern California (heidi.houston@gmail.com)
Takanori Matsuzawa, NIED: National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Resilience (tkmatsu@bosai.go.jp)

Poster Presentations

Participant RoleDetailsAction
SubmissionQuantitative Relationship Between Aseismic Slip Propagation Speed and Frictional PropertiesView
SubmissionStress Regime of the Nankai Trough Megathrust: A Stress Analysis Incorporating Geodetic and Seismic Fault SlipView
SubmissionNumerical Modeling of Long- and Shallow Slow Slip Events Including Shallow Region in Hyuganada and Western Nankai, JapanView
SubmissionSeafloor Borehole Observation Network in the Nankai to Observe Slow Slip Events and Slow EarthquakesView
SubmissionVariable Slow Slip Speeds at Sub-Daily Timescales: Constraints From High-Rate GPS RecordsView
SubmissionLong-Range Dependence in Low-Frequency Earthquakes Catalogs?View
SubmissionHigh-Resolution Imaging of Slow Earthquake Source Processes Resulting From the Cholame Dense Array ExperimentView
SubmissionEarthquake Swarms and Slow Slip on a Sliver Fault in the Mexican Subduction ZoneView
SubmissionSlow Slip and Potential Earthquake Triggering Near Guerrero, Mexico From Geodetic Remote SensingView
SubmissionUsing Earthquake Focal Mechanisms to Investigate Slow Slip Driving Forces in the Northern HikurangiView
SubmissionUncovering the Physical Controls of Slow Slip Events Using Machine LearningView
 
View __ Presentations

The Science of Slow Earthquakes from Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives [Poster]

Description