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Postseismic Relaxation Along the San Andreas Fault at Parkfield from Continuous Seismological Observations
749
Citations
24
References
2008
Year
EngineeringContinuous Seismological ObservationsEarth ScienceSocial SciencesParkfield EarthquakeGeophysicsGlobal Positioning SystemEarthquake SourcePostseismic RelaxationGeodesySeismic CycleInduced SeismicityGeographySan Andreas FaultEarthquake RuptureSeismic Velocity ChangesTectonicsFault GeometrySeismologyCivil EngineeringSeismic Hazard
Seismic velocity changes and nonvolcanic tremor activity in the Parkfield area in California reveal that large earthquakes induce long-term perturbations of crustal properties in the San Andreas fault zone. The 2003 San Simeon and 2004 Parkfield earthquakes both reduced seismic velocities that were measured from correlations of the ambient seismic noise and induced an increased nonvolcanic tremor activity along the San Andreas fault. After the Parkfield earthquake, velocity reduction and nonvolcanic tremor activity remained elevated for more than 3 years and decayed over time, similarly to afterslip derived from GPS (Global Positioning System) measurements. These observations suggest that the seismic velocity changes are related to co-seismic damage in the shallow layers and to deep co-seismic stress change and postseismic stress relaxation within the San Andreas fault zone.
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