Bibcode
Amoruso, Antonella; Crescentini, Luca; Morelli, Andrea; Scarpa, Roberto
Referencia bibliográfica
Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 29, Issue 24, pp. 72-1, CiteID 2219, DOI 10.1029/2002GL016027
Fecha de publicación:
12
2002
Revista
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
Slow earthquakes and afterslips prove that the Earth does not have just
two response time scales, i.e. that of tectonic loading and that of
regular earthquakes. A swarm of slow earthquakes, with time constants of
the order of hundreds of seconds, has been detected by a laser
interferometer below the Gran Sasso massif (Italy). We analyse and model
these observations to identify a very plausible source in a local fault,
with no historic seismic behavior. While slow earthquakes occurring in
subduction zones, and at the transition between locked and stably
sliding segments of the San Andreas fault, are often associated with
seismic events, in the case of the Apennines there is no correlation
between local seismicity and slow earthquakes. Slow earthquakes,
therefore, may also represent a specific failure behavior for a
seismically locked fault, adding further complexity to the
interpretation of geologic data for seismic hazard estimates.