The 2021 Mw 7.3 Madoi, China Earthquake: Transient Supershear Ruptures on a Presumed Immature Strike‐Slip Fault
暂无分享,去创建一个
Dun Wang | L. Fang | Q. Yao | Xiaolin Huang | Chuang Cheng | Zhifeng Wang | Shiqing Xu | Zihao Huang | Tonghui Liu
[1] K. Mizoguchi,et al. Fault strength and rupture process controlled by fault surface topography , 2023, Nature Geoscience.
[2] Haijiang Zhang,et al. Global frequency of oceanic and continental supershear earthquakes , 2022, Nature Geoscience.
[3] Dun Wang,et al. Determination and Comparison of ML, MS_BB, mB, MWp, Mww, Mdt, and M (GNSS) for the 22 May 2021 M7.4 Madoi, Qianghai, China Earthquake , 2022, Journal of Earth Science.
[4] Rong Zou,et al. Coseismic Slip Distribution of the 2021 Mw7.4 Maduo, Qinghai Earthquake Estimated from InSAR and GPS Measurements , 2022, Journal of Earth Science.
[5] Z. Ren,et al. The Interpretation of Seismogenic Fault of the Maduo Mw 7.3 Earthquake, Qinghai Based on Remote Sensing Images—A Branch of the East Kunlun Fault System , 2022, Journal of Earth Science.
[6] Yong Zhang,et al. Rupture process of the 2021 M7.4 Maduo earthquake and implication for deformation mode of the Songpan-Ganzi terrane in Tibetan Plateau , 2022, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[7] E. Lippiello,et al. The Dependence on the Moho Depth of the b-Value of the Gutenberg–Richter Law , 2022, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America.
[8] S. Samsonov,et al. Supershear Rupture During the 2021 MW 7.4 Maduo, China, Earthquake , 2022, Geophysical Research Letters.
[9] H. Si,et al. Estimating Seismic Intensity Maps of the 2021 Mw 7.3 Madoi, Qinghai and Mw 6.1 Yangbi, Yunnan, China Earthquakes , 2022, Journal of Earth Science.
[10] Y. Wan,et al. Source Process Featuring Asymmetric Rupture Velocities of the 2021 Mw 7.4 Maduo, China, Earthquake from Teleseismic and Geodetic Data , 2022, Seismological Research Letters.
[11] Tao Li,et al. Large Surface‐Rupture Gaps and Low Surface Fault Slip of the 2021 Mw 7.4 Maduo Earthquake Along a Low‐Activity Strike‐Slip Fault, Tibetan Plateau , 2022, Geophysical Research Letters.
[12] D. Oglesby,et al. Rupture Heterogeneity and Directivity Effects in Back‐Projection Analysis , 2022, Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth.
[13] J. Avouac,et al. The 2021 Mw 7.4 Madoi Earthquake: An Archetype Bilateral Slip‐Pulse Rupture Arrested at a Splay Fault , 2022, Geophysical Research Letters.
[14] Jihong Liu,et al. Coseismic and Early Postseismic Slip Models of the 2021 Mw 7.4 Maduo Earthquake (Western China) Estimated by Space‐Based Geodetic Data , 2021, Geophysical Research Letters.
[15] Hongfeng Yang,et al. Complex Slip Distribution of the 2021 Mw 7.4 Maduo, China, Earthquake: An Event Occurring on the Slowly Slipping Fault , 2021, Seismological Research Letters.
[16] Y. Fialko,et al. Coseismic and Early Postseismic Deformation Due to the 2021 M7.4 Maduo (China) Earthquake , 2021 .
[17] Caijun Xu,et al. Fault Geometry and Slip Distribution of the 2021 Mw 7.4 Maduo, China, Earthquake Inferred from InSAR Measurements and Relocated Aftershocks , 2021, Seismological Research Letters.
[18] I. Manighetti,et al. Fault Trace Corrugation and Segmentation as a Measure of Fault Structural Maturity , 2021, Geophysical Research Letters.
[19] Junjie Ren,et al. Typical Riedel shear structures of the coseismic surface rupture zone produced by the 2021 Mw 7.3 Maduo earthquake, Qinghai, China, and the implications for seismic hazards in the block interior , 2021, Natural Hazards Research.
[20] Xiaogang Song,et al. Tectonic and Geometric Control on Fault Kinematics of the 2021 Mw7.3 Maduo (China) Earthquake Inferred From Interseismic, Coseismic, and Postseismic InSAR Observations , 2021, Geophysical Research Letters.
[21] L. Fang,et al. Aftershock sequence relocation of the 2021 MS7.4 Maduo Earthquake, Qinghai, China , 2021, Science China Earth Sciences.
[22] W. Barnhart,et al. Permanent Co‐Seismic Deformation of the 2013 Mw7.7 Baluchistan, Pakistan Earthquake From High‐Resolution Surface Strain Analysis , 2021, Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth.
[23] Marion Y. Thomas,et al. Signature of transition to supershear rupture speed in the coseismic off-fault damage zone , 2019, Proceedings of the Royal Society A.
[24] R. Busby,et al. The Alaska Transportable Array: As Built , 2020 .
[25] H. Kehoe,et al. Evidence of a Supershear Transition Across a Fault Stepover , 2020, Geophysical Research Letters.
[26] J. Ampuero,et al. Continuum of earthquake rupture speeds enabled by oblique slip , 2020, Nature Geoscience.
[27] J. Ampuero,et al. Characteristics of earthquake ruptures and dynamic off-fault deformation on propagating faults , 2020, Solid Earth.
[28] Dun Wang,et al. Imaging the rupture process of the 10 January 2018 MW7.5 Swan island, Honduras earthquake , 2020, Earthquake Science.
[29] J. Mori,et al. Rapid Estimation of Magnitudes of Large Damaging Earthquakes in and around Japan Using Dense Seismic Stations in China , 2019, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America.
[30] Shiann-Jong Lee,et al. Complex Triggering Supershear Rupture of the 2018 Mw 7.5 Palu, Indonesia, Earthquake Determined from Teleseismic Source Inversion , 2019, Seismological Research Letters.
[31] E. Fukuyama,et al. Evolution of Fault-Interface Rayleigh Wave speed over simulated earthquake cycles in the lab: Observations, interpretations, and implications , 2019, Earth and Planetary Science Letters.
[32] Dun Wang,et al. Magnitude of the 23 January 2018 M7.9 Alaska Earthquake Estimated from Local Dense Seismic Records in Alaska , 2019, Journal of Earth Science.
[33] F. Waldhauser,et al. Persistent fine-scale fault structure and rupture development: A new twist in the Parkfield, California, story , 2019, Earth and Planetary Science Letters.
[34] Eric J. Fielding,et al. Early and persistent supershear rupture of the 2018 magnitude 7.5 Palu earthquake , 2019, Nature Geoscience.
[35] Chuanyou Li,et al. Late quaternary slip behavior of the Yushu fault and the 2010 Ms 7.1 Yushu earthquake, eastern Tibetan Plateau , 2019, Journal of Structural Geology.
[36] Haijiang Zhang,et al. High‐Resolution Lithospheric Velocity Structure of Continental China by Double‐Difference Seismic Travel‐Time Tomography , 2018, Seismological Research Letters.
[37] T. Lay,et al. Subduction zone megathrust earthquakes , 2018, Geosphere.
[38] R. Langridge,et al. Paleoseismic history and slip rate along the Sapanca-Akyazı segment of the 1999 İzmit earthquake rupture (M w = 7.4) of the North Anatolian Fault (Turkey) , 2018, Tectonophysics.
[39] K. Mizoguchi,et al. Strain rate effect on fault slip and rupture evolution: Insight from meter-scale rock friction experiments , 2017 .
[40] P. Shearer,et al. Investigation of Backprojection Uncertainties With M6 Earthquakes , 2017 .
[41] G. Dresen,et al. What allows seismic events to grow big?: Insights from b-value and fault roughness analysis in laboratory stick-slip experiments , 2017 .
[42] Guo Wenbin,et al. INVESTIGATION ON DIVERSITY OF CRUSTAL STRUCTURES BENEATH THE BAYAN HAR BLOCK , 2017 .
[43] Jinhai Zhang,et al. Restoration of clipped seismic waveforms using projection onto convex sets method , 2016, Scientific Reports.
[44] Zhenguo Zhang,et al. Supershear transition mechanism induced by step over geometry , 2016 .
[45] K. Mizoguchi,et al. Cohesive zone length of metagabbro at supershear rupture velocity , 2016, Journal of Seismology.
[46] J. Ampuero,et al. Location of largest earthquake slip and fast rupture controlled by along‐strike change in fault structural maturity due to fault growth , 2016 .
[47] K. Koketsu,et al. Fast rupture propagation for large strike-slip earthquakes , 2016 .
[48] Z. Ren,et al. Backprojection analyses from four regional arrays for rupture over a curved dipping fault: The Mw 7.7 24 September 2013 Pakistan earthquake , 2016 .
[49] Y. Yagi,et al. Improving back projection imaging with a novel physics‐based aftershock calibration approach: A case study of the 2015 Gorkha earthquake , 2016 .
[50] J. Fineberg,et al. Properties of the shear stress peak radiated ahead of rapidly accelerating rupture fronts that mediate frictional slip , 2016, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[51] E. Dunham,et al. Journal of Geophysical Research : Solid Earth Rupture complexity and the supershear transition on rough faults , 2016 .
[52] D. Helmberger,et al. The potential for supershear earthquakes in damaged fault zones – theory and observations , 2016 .
[53] Peter M. Shearer,et al. Detailed rupture imaging of the 25 April 2015 Nepal earthquake using teleseismic P waves , 2015 .
[54] Y. Yagi,et al. Relationship between High-frequency Radiation and Asperity Ruptures, Revealed by Hybrid Back-projection with a Non-planar Fault Model , 2014, Scientific Reports.
[55] P. Shearer,et al. Supershear rupture in a Mw 6.7 aftershock of the 2013 Sea of Okhotsk earthquake , 2014, Science.
[56] D. Oglesby,et al. Dynamically modeling fault step overs using various friction laws , 2014 .
[57] M. Vallée,et al. Ten year recurrence time between two major earthquakes affecting the same fault segment , 2014 .
[58] A. Rosakis,et al. Experimental investigation of strong ground motion due to thrust fault earthquakes , 2014 .
[59] Remko Scharroo,et al. Generic Mapping Tools: Improved Version Released , 2013 .
[60] François Renard,et al. Effect of fault heterogeneity on rupture dynamics: An experimental approach using ultrafast ultrasonic imaging , 2013 .
[61] K. Koper,et al. Supershear rupture of the 5 January 2013 Craig, Alaska (Mw 7.5) earthquake , 2013 .
[62] James L. Beck,et al. Bayesian inversion for finite fault earthquake source models I—theory and algorithm , 2013 .
[63] R. Madariaga,et al. From Sub-Rayleigh to Supershear Ruptures During Stick-Slip Experiments on Crustal Rocks , 2013, Science.
[64] S. Day,et al. Rupture dynamics and ground motion from 3‐D rough‐fault simulations , 2013 .
[65] Y. Ben‐Zion,et al. Numerical and theoretical analyses of in-plane dynamic rupture on a frictional interface and off-fault yielding patterns at different scales , 2012 .
[66] D. Wang,et al. Supershear Rupture on Conjugate Faults for the Mw 8.6 Off Northern Sumatra, Indonesia Earthquake of April 11, 2012 , 2012 .
[67] C. Satriano,et al. The 2012 Mw 8.6 Sumatra earthquake: Evidence of westward sequential seismic ruptures associated to the reactivation of a N‐S ocean fabric , 2012 .
[68] J. Stock,et al. Earthquake in a Maze: Compressional Rupture Branching During the 2012 Mw 8.6 Sumatra Earthquake , 2012, Science.
[69] P. Shearer,et al. Subevent location and rupture imaging using iterative backprojection for the 2011 Tohoku Mw 9.0 earthquake , 2012 .
[70] J. Mori,et al. The 2010 Qinghai, China, Earthquake: A Moderate Earthquake with Supershear Rupture , 2012 .
[71] Ge Zengxi. Rupture Imaging of the 2010 Mw 8.8 Great Chilean Earthquake Using Relative Back-Projection Method , 2012 .
[72] Hiroo Kanamori,et al. Insights from the great 2011 Japan earthquake , 2011 .
[73] M. Ishii,et al. The 2010 Mw 8.8 Chile earthquake: Triggering on multiple segments and frequency‐dependent rupture behavior , 2011 .
[74] E. Dunham,et al. Earthquake Ruptures with Strongly Rate-Weakening Friction and Off-Fault Plasticity , Part 2 : Nonplanar Faults by , 2011 .
[75] François Renard,et al. Faulting characteristics of supershear earthquakes , 2010 .
[76] Y. Kaneko,et al. Supershear transition due to a free surface in 3-D simulations of spontaneous dynamic rupture on vertical strike-slip faults , 2010 .
[77] Yun‐tai Chen,et al. Fast inversion of rupture process of the 14 April 2010 Yushu, Qinghai, earthquake , 2010 .
[78] Yann Klinger,et al. Coseismic reverse- and oblique-slip surface faulting generated by the 2008 Mw 7.9 Wenchuan earthquake, China , 2009 .
[79] P. Shearer,et al. Illuminating the near‐sonic rupture velocities of the intracontinental Kokoxili Mw 7.8 and Denali fault Mw 7.9 strike‐slip earthquakes with global P wave back projection imaging , 2009 .
[80] Yehuda Ben-Zion,et al. Collective behavior of earthquakes and faults: Continuum‐discrete transitions, progressive evolutionary changes, and different dynamic regimes , 2008 .
[81] S. Day,et al. Inelastic strain distribution and seismic radiation from rupture of a fault kink , 2008 .
[82] M. Bouchon,et al. The Aftershock Signature of Supershear Earthquakes , 2008, Science.
[83] D. Pantosti,et al. Preliminary slip rate estimates for the Düzce segment of the North Anatolian Fault Zone from offset geomorphic markers , 2008 .
[84] David Hinkley,et al. Bootstrap Methods: Another Look at the Jackknife , 2008 .
[85] P. Shearer,et al. Teleseismic P wave imaging of the 26 December 2004 Sumatra‐Andaman and 28 March 2005 Sumatra earthquake ruptures using the Hi‐net array , 2007 .
[86] Eric M. Dunham,et al. Conditions governing the occurrence of supershear ruptures under slip-weakening friction , 2007 .
[87] Harsha S. Bhat,et al. Off‐fault damage patterns due to supershear ruptures with application to the 2001 Mw 8.1 Kokoxili (Kunlun) Tibet earthquake , 2007 .
[88] F. Cotton,et al. Earthquake scaling, fault segmentation, and structural maturity , 2007 .
[89] A. Rosakis,et al. Laboratory Earthquakes , 2006 .
[90] B. Fu,et al. Late Quaternary systematic stream offsets caused by repeated large seismic events along the Kunlun fault, northern Tibet , 2005 .
[91] Matthias Ohrnberger,et al. Tracking the rupture of the Mw = 9.3 Sumatra earthquake over 1,150 km at teleseismic distance , 2005, Nature.
[92] Peter M. Shearer,et al. Extent, duration and speed of the 2004 Sumatra–Andaman earthquake imaged by the Hi-Net array , 2005, Nature.
[93] Hiroyuki Fujiwara,et al. Recent Progress of Seismic Observation Networks in Japan , 2004 .
[94] Ares J. Rosakis,et al. Laboratory Earthquakes: The Sub-Rayleigh-to-Supershear Rupture Transition , 2004, Science.
[95] Huajian Gao,et al. Hyperelasticity governs dynamic fracture at a critical length scale , 2003, Nature.
[96] A. Rosakis,et al. On the influence of fault bends on the growth of sub‐Rayleigh and intersonic dynamic shear ruptures , 2003 .
[97] Michel Bouchon,et al. Observation of Long Supershear Rupture During the Magnitude 8.1 Kunlunshan Earthquake , 2003, Science.
[98] E. Dunham,et al. A Supershear Transition Mechanism for Cracks , 2003, Science.
[99] Yehuda Ben-Zion,et al. Characterization of Fault Zones , 2003 .
[100] S. Ide. Estimation of Radiated Energy of Finite-Source Earthquake Models , 2002 .
[101] Nobuki Kame,et al. Effects of prestress state and rupture velocity on dynamic fault branching , 2002 .
[102] James R. Rice,et al. Dynamic shear rupture interactions with fault bends and off-axis secondary faulting , 2002 .
[103] Chen Ji,et al. Source Description of the 1999 Hector Mine, California, Earthquake, Part I: Wavelet Domain Inversion Theory and Resolution Analysis , 2002 .
[104] Eric J. Fielding,et al. Deformation during the 12 November 1999 Duzce, Turkey, earthquake, from GPS and InSar Data , 2002 .
[105] Ares J. Rosakis,et al. How fast is rupture during an earthquake? New insights from the 1999 Turkey Earthquakes , 2001 .
[106] Donald W. Boyd,et al. CHAPTER 8 – Stochastic Analysis , 2001 .
[107] F. Waldhauser,et al. A Double-Difference Earthquake Location Algorithm: Method and Application to the Northern Hayward Fault, California , 2000 .
[108] Mustafa Aktar,et al. Seismic imaging of the 1999 Izmit (Turkey) Rupture inferred from the near‐fault recordings , 2000 .
[109] T. Yamashita,et al. A new light on arresting mechanism of dynamic earthquake faulting , 1999 .
[110] Thomas J. Owens,et al. The TauP Toolkit: Flexible Seismic Travel-Time and Raypath Utilities , 1999 .
[111] D. Wells,et al. New empirical relationships among magnitude, rupture length, rupture width, rupture area, and surface displacement , 1994, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America.
[112] Steven M. Day,et al. Dynamics of fault interaction: parallel strike‐slip faults , 1993 .
[113] B. Kennett,et al. Traveltimes for global earthquake location and phase identification , 1991 .
[114] GEOFFREY KING,et al. Role of Fault Bends in the Initiation and Termination of Earthquake Rupture , 1985, Science.
[115] L. Neil Frazer,et al. Use of ray theory to calculate high-frequency radiation from earthquake sources having spatially variable rupture velocity and stress drop , 1984 .
[116] Ralph J. Archuleta,et al. A faulting model for the 1979 Imperial Valley earthquake , 1984 .
[117] Thomas H. Heaton,et al. Inversion of strong ground motion and teleseismic waveform data for the fault rupture history of the 1979 Imperial Valley, California, earthquake , 1983 .
[118] Allen H. Olson,et al. Finite faults and inverse theory with applications to the 1979 Imperial Valley earthquake , 1982 .
[119] Raul Madariaga,et al. On the relation between seismic moment and stress drop in the presence of stress and strength heterogeneity , 1979 .
[120] D. J. Andrews,et al. Rupture velocity of plane strain shear cracks , 1976 .
[121] Robert Burridge,et al. Admissible Speeds for Plane-Strain Self-Similar Shear Cracks with Friction but Lacking Cohesion , 1973 .