地质学
打滑(空气动力学)
流离失所(心理学)
岩土工程
工程类
心理学
航空航天工程
心理治疗师
作者
Nadine G. Reitman,Yann Klinger,Richard W. Briggs,Ryan D. Gold
摘要
Abstract Offset geomorphic markers are commonly used to interpret slip history of strike‐slip faults and have played an important role in forming earthquake recurrence models. These data sets are typically analyzed using cumulative probability methods to interpret average amounts of slip in past earthquakes. However, interpretation of the geomorphic record to infer surface slip history is complicated by slip variability, measurement uncertainty, and modification of offset features in the landscape. To investigate how well geomorphic data record surface slip, we use offset measurements from recent strike‐slip surface ruptures ( n = 39), faults with geomorphic evidence of multiple strike‐slip earthquakes ( n = 29), and synthetic slip distributions with added noise ( n 10,000) to examine the constraints of the geomorphic record and the underlying assumptions of the cumulative offset probability distribution analysis method. We find that the geomorphic record is unlikely to resolve more than two paleo‐slip distributions, except in specific cases with low slip variability, high slip‐per‐event, and semiarid climate. In cases where site‐specific conditions allow for interpretation of more than two earthquakes, lateral extrapolation along a fault is not straightforward because on‐fault displacement and distributed deformation may be spatially variable in each earthquake. We also find that average slip in modern earthquakes is adequately recovered by probability methods, but the reported prevalence of strike‐slip faults with characteristic slip history is not supported by geomorphic data. We also propose updated methods to interpret slip history and construct uncertainty bounds for paleo‐slip distributions.
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