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Microearthquake activity following the Parkfield, California earthquake of June, 1966

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abstract A high sensitivity microearthquake recording station was established 10 km from the epicenter of the magnitude 5.5 Parkfield earthquake of June 28, 1966. Beginning 43 hours after the main shock, an hourly average of 22 microaftershocks was recorded for a period of 13 days. Events with magnitudes roughly equivalent to a Richter magnitude of −1.5 were recorded. The amplitude distribution suggests that there was a smaller percentage of small shocks in the Parkfield microaftershock series than has commonly been reported for Japanese and other California aftershock series. b values between 0.8 and 0.9 are commonly reported while the average b value for the Parkfield microaftershock series was 0.59. The distribution of S-P times for the microaftershocks is consistent with the epicentral area defined in other studies as a strip approximately 5 km wide astride a 35 km long trace of the San Andreas fault; however, some evidence suggests that the microaftershock activity extends beyond the zone defined by the larger aftershocks. The spatial distribution of microearthquake activity is shown to be strongly non-uniform within the aftershock zone. The microaftershocks, in general, did not cluster in time about the larger aftershocks (M > 2.0). Of 24 aftershocks with M greater than or equal to 2.0, only one event gave strong evidence of triggering a secondary aftershock series. Assuming that secondary foreshock and/or aftershock series imply the creation or reactivation of a secondary fault, one is led to the conclusion that secondary faulting was a rare occurrence in the Parkfield aftershock zone.
Title: Microearthquake activity following the Parkfield, California earthquake of June, 1966
Description:
abstract A high sensitivity microearthquake recording station was established 10 km from the epicenter of the magnitude 5.
5 Parkfield earthquake of June 28, 1966.
Beginning 43 hours after the main shock, an hourly average of 22 microaftershocks was recorded for a period of 13 days.
Events with magnitudes roughly equivalent to a Richter magnitude of −1.
5 were recorded.
The amplitude distribution suggests that there was a smaller percentage of small shocks in the Parkfield microaftershock series than has commonly been reported for Japanese and other California aftershock series.
b values between 0.
8 and 0.
9 are commonly reported while the average b value for the Parkfield microaftershock series was 0.
59.
The distribution of S-P times for the microaftershocks is consistent with the epicentral area defined in other studies as a strip approximately 5 km wide astride a 35 km long trace of the San Andreas fault; however, some evidence suggests that the microaftershock activity extends beyond the zone defined by the larger aftershocks.
The spatial distribution of microearthquake activity is shown to be strongly non-uniform within the aftershock zone.
The microaftershocks, in general, did not cluster in time about the larger aftershocks (M > 2.
0).
Of 24 aftershocks with M greater than or equal to 2.
0, only one event gave strong evidence of triggering a secondary aftershock series.
Assuming that secondary foreshock and/or aftershock series imply the creation or reactivation of a secondary fault, one is led to the conclusion that secondary faulting was a rare occurrence in the Parkfield aftershock zone.

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