Group A, Poster #045, Seismology
A remarkable sequence in a remote location: A detailed characterization of the 2014-2018 Sheldon, Nevada earthquake swarm
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Poster Presentation
2023 SCEC Annual Meeting, Poster #045, SCEC Contribution #13005 VIEW PDF
y transitioning to downdip to the east. Inversion of hundreds of moment tensors constrain the overall normal faulting stress regime. Source spectral analysis suggests that the stress drops and rupture properties of these normal faulting events are typical for tectonic earthquakes in the western US. While station coverage is sparse in this remote study region, the timely installation of a temporary seismometer allows us to detect nearly 70,000 earthquakes over a 40-month time period when the seismic activity is highest. Systematic measurements of earthquake sequence productivity in California and Nevada demonstrate that the Sheldon sequence is without precedent over the past 40 years of monitoring, and is difficult to reconcile with current understanding of crustal deformation in the region. We posit that the dynamics of the swarm are likely facilitated by feedback and interactions between local hydrothermal processes and earthquake triggering at the transition zone between subparallel fault systems.
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