24–26 Oct 2018
Han-sur-Lesse
Europe/Brussels timezone

A New Paradigm for Large Earthquakes in Stable Continental Plate Interiors

24 Oct 2018, 10:00
40m
Han-sur-Lesse

Han-sur-Lesse

Keynote Session 1

Speaker

Dr Eric Calais (Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris - France)

Description

Large earthquakes within stable continental regions (SCR) show that significant amounts of elastic strain can be released on geological structures far from plate boundary faults, where the vast majority of the Earth’s seismic activity takes place. SCR earthquakes show spatial and temporal patterns that differ from those at plate boundaries and occur in regions where tectonic loading rates are negligible. However, in the absence of a more appropriate model, they are traditionally viewed as analogous to their plate boundary counterparts, occuring when the accrual of tectonic stress localized at long-lived active faults reaches failure threshold. On the basis of a series of observational arguments, we will make the case that SCR earthquakes are better explained by transient perturbations of local stress or fault strength that release elastic energy from a pre-stressed lithosphere. As a result, SCR earthquakes can occur in regions with no previous seismicity and no surface evidence for strain accumulation. They need not repeat, since the tectonic loading rate is close to zero. Therefore, concepts of recurrence time or fault slip rate do not apply. As a consequence, seismic hazard in SCRs is likely more spatially distributed than indicated by paleoearthquakes, current seismicity, or geodetic strain rates.

Primary author

Dr Eric Calais (Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris - France)

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.