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      Aftershocks driven by afterslip and fluid pressure sweeping through a fault-fracture mesh : Aftershocks From Afterslip and Fluids

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          A constitutive law for rate of earthquake production and its application to earthquake clustering

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            The role of stress transfer in earthquake occurrence

            Ross Stein (1999)
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              Aftershocks driven by a high-pressure CO2 source at depth.

              In northern Italy in 1997, two earthquakes of magnitudes 5.7 and 6 (separated by nine hours) marked the beginning of a sequence that lasted more than 30 days, with thousands of aftershocks including four additional events with magnitudes between 5 and 6. This normal-faulting sequence is not well explained with models of elastic stress transfer, particularly the persistence of hanging-wall seismicity that included two events with magnitudes greater than 5. Here we show that this sequence may have been driven by a fluid pressure pulse generated from the coseismic release of a known deep source of trapped high-pressure carbon dioxide (CO2). We find a strong correlation between the high-pressure front and the aftershock hypocentres over a two-week period, using precise hypocentre locations and a simple model of nonlinear diffusion. The triggering amplitude (10-20 MPa) of the pressure pulse overwhelms the typical (0.1-0.2 MPa) range from stress changes in the usual stress triggering models. We propose that aftershocks of large earthquakes in such geologic environments may be driven by the coseismic release of trapped, high-pressure fluids propagating through damaged zones created by the mainshock. This may provide a link between earthquakes, aftershocks, crust/mantle degassing and earthquake-triggered large-scale fluid flow.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Geophysical Research Letters
                Geophys. Res. Lett.
                Wiley
                00948276
                August 28 2017
                August 28 2017
                August 19 2017
                : 44
                : 16
                : 8260-8267
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Seismological Laboratory; California Institute of Technology; Pasadena California USA
                [2 ]United States Geological Survey; Pasadena California USA
                [3 ]Department of Earth Sciences; University of Southern California; Los Angeles California USA
                Article
                10.1002/2017GL074634
                a2c0aabb-301c-4bb3-8608-8f4d6adf0fd7
                © 2017

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

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