Letter

Nature 462, 87-89 (5 November 2009) | doi:10.1038/nature08502; Received 13 May 2009; Accepted 11 September 2009

Long aftershock sequences within continents and implications for earthquake hazard assessment

Seth Stein1 & Mian Liu2

  1. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208, USA
  2. Department of Geological Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211, USA

Correspondence to: Seth Stein1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to S.S. (Email: seth@earth.northwestern.edu).

One of the most powerful features of plate tectonics is that the known plate motions give insight into both the locations and average recurrence interval of future large earthquakes on plate boundaries. Plate tectonics gives no insight, however, into where and when earthquakes will occur within plates, because the interiors of ideal plates should not deform. As a result, within plate interiors, assessments of earthquake hazards rely heavily on the assumption that the locations of small earthquakes shown by the short historical record reflect continuing deformation that will cause future large earthquakes1. Here, however, we show that many of these recent earthquakes are probably aftershocks of large earthquakes that occurred hundreds of years ago. We present a simple model predicting that the length of aftershock sequences varies inversely with the rate at which faults are loaded. Aftershock sequences within the slowly deforming continents are predicted to be significantly longer than the decade typically observed at rapidly loaded plate boundaries. These predictions are in accord with observations. So the common practice of treating continental earthquakes as steady-state seismicity overestimates the hazard in presently active areas and underestimates it elsewhere.

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