Episodic nature of earthquake activity in stable continental regions revealed by palaeoseismicity studies of Australian and North American quaternary faults
- 1 April 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Australian Journal of Earth Sciences
- Vol. 44 (2) , 203-214
- https://doi.org/10.1080/08120099708728304
Abstract
Palaeoseismic investigations of recent faulting in stable continental regions of Australia, North America and India show that these faults typically have a long‐term behaviour characterised by episodes of activity separated by quiescent intervals of at least 10 000 and commonly 100 000 years or more. Long recurrence intervals such as these are well documented by detailed studies of the faults that ruptured during the 1986 Marryat Creek, South Australia and 1988 Tennant Creek, Northern Territory earthquakes. Thus, neotectonic features associated with stable continental region faults such as scarps and grabens commonly have subtle geomorphic expression and may be poorly preserved. Many potentially hazardous faults in stable continental regions are aseismic, which is one reason why the inventory of these faults is incomplete. Although they may be currently aseismic, faults in stable continental regions that are favourably oriented for movement in the current stress field could produce damaging earthquakes, often in unexpected places. Comprehensive palaeoseismic investigations of modern and prehistoric faulting events in stable continental regions are needed to understand the long‐term behaviour of these faults, and thereby, improve seismic‐hazard assessments.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- The 1988 Tennant Creek, northern territory, earthquakes: A synthesisAustralian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1992
- Geodetic evidence for conjugate faulting during the 1988 Tennant Creek, Australia earthquake sequenceGeophysical Journal International, 1991
- The first surface faulting from a historical intraplate earthquake in North AmericaNature, 1991
- Rupture process of a multiple main shock sequence: Analysis of teleseismic, local, and field observations of the Tennant Creek, Australia, earthquakes of January 22, 1988Journal of Geophysical Research, 1990
- The bear and the pussycatNature, 1990
- Style and timing of Holocene surface faulting on the Meers fault, southwestern OklahomaGSA Bulletin, 1990
- Source Parameters of Seven Large Australian Earthquakes Determined By Body Waveform InversionGeophysical Journal International, 1988
- Temporal and Spatial Clustering of Earthquake Activity in the Central and Eastern United StatesSeismological Research Letters, 1988
- Seismotectonics of the Guinean Earthquake of December 22, 1983Geophysical Research Letters, 1984
- THE K HORIZONSoil Science, 1965