Publication | Closed Access
Scaling differences between large interplate and intraplate earthquakes
281
Citations
17
References
1986
Year
Fault GeometryEngineeringSeismic CycleStructural GeologySeismologyLarge Intraplate EarthquakesIntraplate EarthquakesCivil EngineeringMechanical EngineeringEarthquake SourceEarthquake RuptureRupture LengthScaling LawSeismic HazardEarth ScienceTectonics
A study of large intraplate earthquakes with well determined source parameters shows that these earthquakes obey a scaling law similar to large interplate earthquakes, in which M sub o varies as L sup 2 or u = alpha L where L is rupture length and u is slip. In contrast to interplate earthquakes, for which alpha approximately equals 1 x .00001, for the intraplate events alpha approximately equals 6 x .0001, which implies that these earthquakes have stress-drops about 6 times higher than interplate events. This result is independent of focal mechanism type. This implies that intraplate faults have a higher frictional strength than plate boundaries, and hence, that faults are velocity or slip weakening in their behavior. This factor may be important in producing the concentrated deformation that creates and maintains plate boundaries.
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