Influence of Static Stress Changes on Earthquake Locations in Southern California

Ruth A. Harris, Robert W. Simpson, & Paul Reasenberg

Published May 1995, SCEC Contribution #304

EARTHQUAKES induce changes in static stress on neighbouring faults that may delay, hasten or even trigger subsequent earthquakes. The length of time over which such effects persist has a bearing on the potential contribution of stress analyses to earthquake hazard assessment, but is presently unknown. Here we use an elastic half-space model to estimate the static stress changes generated by damaging (magnitude Mgreater than or equal to5) earthquakes in southern California over the past 26 years, and to investigate the influence of these changes on subsequent earthquake activity. We find that, in the 1.5-year period following a Mgreater than or equal to5 earthquake, any subsequent nearby Mgreater than or equal to5 earthquake almost always ruptures a fault that is loaded towards failure by the first earthquake. After this period, damaging earthquakes are equally likely to rupture loaded and relaxed faults. Our results suggest that there is a short period of time following a damaging earthquake in southern California in which simple Coulomb failure stress models could be used to identify regions of increased seismic hazard.

Citation
Harris, R. A., Simpson, R. W., & Reasenberg, P. (1995). Influence of Static Stress Changes on Earthquake Locations in Southern California. Nature, 375(6528), 221-224. doi: 10.1038/375221a0.