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1 oustic emissions (AEs) (analogous to natural seismicity).
2  and quantitative tool to spatially forecast seismicity.
3  is the trigger of instability that leads to seismicity.
4 should lead to temporal clustering of global seismicity.
5 cy events, analogous to volcanic long-period seismicity.
6 s are likely to exist, due to a lack of deep seismicity.
7 on for its presence in other regions of deep seismicity.
8 tes of hydroacoustically recorded earthquake seismicity.
9 , the slow slip began before the increase in seismicity.
10 pid tapering to markedly decreased levels of seismicity.
11  recurrence statistics derived from regional seismicity.
12 zard and for processes that drive intraplate seismicity.
13 e propagation direction, including triggered seismicity.
14 ction based on spatio-temporal variations of seismicity.
15 served logarithmic periodicity in precursory seismicity.
16 luence on the nature of self-organization of seismicity.
17 nstead it must depend on the fluctuations in seismicity.
18 ions between faults associated with regional seismicity.
19 ip distribution on the main rupture from the seismicity.
20  brittle crust and of the causes of volcanic seismicity.
21 drothermal system as the cause of uplift and seismicity.
22 ned from the depth of the current background seismicity.
23  could help to manage and mitigate triggered seismicity.
24  reduction in both the deformation rates and seismicity.
25 y experiencing significant ground uplift and seismicity.
26 orage beneath the depths of located volcanic seismicity.
27  properties distinguish regions with ongoing seismicity.
28 ure, promoting fault weakening and shallower seismicity.
29 increase seems to be insufficient to trigger seismicity.
30 namic strains no longer triggered detectable seismicity.
31  relationships with volcanism and deep-focus seismicity.
32 olonged, large amplitude uplift and elevated seismicity.
33 episodes accompanied by increases in shallow seismicity.
34 assess the potential for reservoir-triggered seismicity.
35 genic(1,23), was associated with substantial seismicity.
36  variation of regional stress in relation to seismicity.
37 hanism for localized crustal deformation and seismicity.
38  been linked to lithospheric deformation and seismicity.
39 rovide the source of the observed uplift and seismicity.
40 arriers while triggering intense surrounding seismicity.
41 roduce fluid overpressures which may trigger seismicity.
42 t could result in overpressuring and induced seismicity.
43 er-arrival times population marks background seismicity.
44 ring the occurrence of postinjection induced seismicity.
45 of inducing 20% of 2008 to 2013 central U.S. seismicity.
46 potential impacts on crustal deformation and seismicity.
47 r injected tracks the long-term evolution of seismicity.
48        Furthermore, we interpret the band of seismicity above the magma chamber as a zone of hydrothe
49  also review the historical and instrumental seismicity affecting this region.
50                                              Seismicity along continental transform faults is usually
51 a's national hazard maps have not considered seismicity along the Baribis Fault.
52 manifests as migrating swarms of extensional seismicity along the ridge axis, can provide the small i
53                                              Seismicity also indicates that the same dike path was pa
54 nce of M6+ events occurred in 2022, and both seismicity and aseismic slip gradually increased again s
55  as island-arc volcanism, intermediate-depth seismicity and chemical exchange between the subducting
56 lerating rates of geophysical signals (e.g., seismicity and deformation) preceding large-scale dynami
57 file cases of damage caused by this trailing seismicity and due to the loss of control for risk manag
58      There were no precursor signals such as seismicity and edifice inflation.
59          We show that perplexing patterns in seismicity and fault plane solutions can be accounted fo
60                              The patterns of seismicity and faulting are similar to those observed in
61    These interpretations are consistent with seismicity and GPS-geodetically observed right-lateral s
62 issions and thermal anomalies, combined with seismicity and ground observations, we show that in Dece
63 re and mineralogy, so the connection between seismicity and healing may help to explain recent observ
64                                  Here we use seismicity and hydrogeological models to show that fluid
65 ween the start of injection and the onset of seismicity and in regions that went on to host moderate
66        Here, using an integrated analysis of seismicity and magma rheology, we show that the orientat
67 t zone behaviors using geodetic observation, seismicity and microearthquake focal mechanisms.
68                   Ground-based monitoring of seismicity and modulation by external forces in the fiel
69 hus facilitate a better understanding of the seismicity and other precursors of dyke-fed eruptions.
70       The origin and prevalence of triggered seismicity and remote aftershocks are under debate.
71                   Preliminary examination of seismicity and seafloor morphology farther north along t
72 cale erosion rates correlate with historical seismicity and storm-driven runoff variability.
73 ow models that reveal a relationship between seismicity and the rate change of 'dynamic topography' (
74 seismic evidence to test whether patterns of seismicity and the stabilities of these potentially rele
75  the sequence within the context of regional seismicity and to identify areas of remaining and/or ele
76         Observations that unequivocally link seismicity and wastewater injection are scarce.
77 cking, slow slip and creep transients, swarm seismicity, and rapid pressure/stress transmission in in
78 on of these geodetic data, template-matching seismicity, and repeating earthquakes, revealed the firs
79 ns began after only minor surface uplift and seismicity, and resulted in caldera subsidence.
80 ons of aseismic slip, temporal clustering of seismicity, and spatial variations in earthquake size di
81        Both landscape evolution and regional seismicity appear to be examples of self-organized criti
82  to upper-crustal deformation and associated seismicity are highlighted by the January 19th, 2021 (Mw
83         Most observations of fluctuations of seismicity are of the rate of occurrence of smaller eart
84 b-values, and stress orientations of in-slab seismicity are temporally associated with the episodes.
85           Increased rates of deformation and seismicity are well-established precursors to volcanic e
86 ose that precursory, abnormal, low-magnitude seismicity arises if the pore fluid pressure within larg
87 ls motivated an investigation into the local seismicity around the Narli Fault.
88 ference between magnitudes in two subsets of seismicity as dependent on their population count ratio.
89                 The Government cited induced seismicity as the key rationale for its November 2019 En
90 ation of subduction-related geochemistry and seismicity as well as water transportation into the deep
91 tion of burst-type repeating earthquakes and seismicity associated with a recent slow slip event(7) d
92 he "forearc seismic belt" corresponds to the seismicity assumed to result from fluid supply from the
93                                Clustering of seismicity at 120-160 km depth suggests that the slab's
94     The inter-arrival times of the post 2000 seismicity at Campi Flegrei caldera are statistically di
95 relation between dehydration of minerals and seismicity at depths less than about 250 km, and conclud
96 intraplate earthquakes, temporal patterns in seismicity at remote plate boundaries, and space-based g
97 data does not support the presence of mantle seismicity beneath Los Angeles but suggests a fault mode
98    Our analyses also indicate that clustered seismicity beneath the caldera occurs on relatively imma
99 rther, the seasonal variation with an annual seismicity burst and seismic periodicity at polar wobble
100  structures hosting the mainshocks (on-fault seismicity), but also occurs within volumes of Triassic
101 re is increasing evidence that the Himalayan seismicity can be bimodal: blind earthquakes (up to Mw ~
102 at intermediate depth (50 to 200 kilometers) seismicity can be generated by dehydration reactions in
103                                  Analysis of seismicity can illuminate active fault zone structures b
104 ftershocks implies that such transform-fault seismicity cannot be explained by seismic triggering mod
105 that are based on observations of precursory seismicity cannot depend on the average properties of th
106 ry of the faults, develop a greatly enlarged seismicity catalog and record details of the rupture kin
107                   Using a recently generated seismicity catalog from a local network in Oaxaca, we id
108                    Our analysis expanded the seismicity catalog from around 12,000 to more than 54,00
109 aration is accurately quantified with global seismicity catalogs alone.
110 om earthquake occurrence rates obtained from seismicity catalogues.
111 dered to belong to a unique class of volcano-seismicity characterised by a long-duration coda, amplit
112 y on fluid-induced fault slip and associated seismicity characteristics using laboratory experiments
113 (RFS) featuring a very narrow depth range of seismicity, clearly illuminated shallow faults in the no
114                           Although increased seismicity commonly accompanies geothermal production, i
115                          Reservoir-triggered seismicity commonly occurs as a result of reservoir impo
116 tern equatorial Pacific reveal low-magnitude seismicity concentrated at the propagating tip of the Ga
117 Yellowstone has remained restless, with high seismicity, continuing uplift/subsidence episodes with m
118 el describes the physical processes inducing seismicity corresponding to the sequential stimulation o
119 possibility has considerable appeal, because seismicity data are routinely collected and have good sp
120                       Geodetic, seismic, and seismicity data provided an integrative view of this seq
121                                              Seismicity data support the abandonment of laterally off
122 n 300 m from the 2 </= M < 3 mainshocks, the seismicity decay 5 min before the mainshocks is indistin
123 jacent to the central sub-basin and like the seismicity decreases to the north and south.
124   The short time delay between injection and seismicity differs from both the hypothetical expected t
125 y debated, with recent periods of uplift and seismicity driven either by the release of aqueous fluid
126 ing decreased recurrence intervals, we infer seismicity during this interval records fault-valve beha
127 ons, and Coulomb static stress transfer from seismicity earlier in the sequence are assessed in real-
128                                      Bimodal seismicity emerges as a result of relatively higher fric
129 gnificant implications on scales relevant to seismicity, energy resources, engineering applications a
130 t the fluctuations of the order parameter of seismicity exhibit distinct minima a few months before a
131                             Dyke opening and seismicity focused at the most distal segment at any giv
132 bsequent finite-element modelling shows that seismicity focuses in regions of high-gravity-derived de
133  distinct unrest patterns, including shallow seismicity following substantial strain accumulation, al
134                                          The seismicity formulation predicts large changes of earthqu
135  localization, with both natural and induced seismicity generally clustered in discrete zones.
136 ly over 14 days, was revealed by propagating seismicity, ground deformation mapped by Global Position
137     Many active volcanoes exhibit changes in seismicity, ground deformation, and gas emissions, which
138 at began on September 11, although anomalous seismicity has been observed on the island since 2017.
139 t those seismic signals generated from micro seismicity have extremely low amplitude.
140 nate two puzzling features of plate boundary seismicity: how great earthquakes can re-rupture regions
141 urface geonergy can induce ground motion and seismicity, however a scarcity of observations usually o
142 f large historic earthquakes and present-day seismicity implies a modestly higher seismic hazard duri
143 ata and the frequency-magnitude relation for seismicity imply that had the largest shocks in the seri
144 beneath Long Beach, California, and identify seismicity in an actively deforming localized zone penet
145 of elevated hazard based on a lack of recent seismicity in comparison with other portions of a fault.
146 s one of the most important cases of induced seismicity in Europe and a rare example of seismicity in
147 provide additional context for understanding seismicity in hydrothermal systems, highlighting the key
148                  The extent to which ongoing seismicity in intraplate regions represents long-lived a
149 hquakes in some regions while increasing the seismicity in neighboring regions, up to the present.
150 injected) provides the best correlation with seismicity in recent years.
151 c ground motion excitations representing the seismicity in Saqqara is presented.
152 he observational data of the fluctuations of seismicity in space, in time, and in a coupled space-tim
153  The 2004 M = 9.2 Sumatra earthquake altered seismicity in the Andaman backarc rift-transform system.
154               Hydrologic loads can stimulate seismicity in the Earth's crust(1).
155                               The absence of seismicity in the flat-lying slab is explained by signif
156 belts, including, for example, the causes of seismicity in the Indian plate beneath the modern Himala
157                                              Seismicity in the Los Angeles metropolitan area has been
158                A recent dramatic increase in seismicity in the midwestern United States may be relate
159      We examined historical and instrumental seismicity in the New Madrid central U.S. region to dete
160    Our results imply that ongoing background seismicity in the New Madrid region is driven by ongoing
161 rocesses are directly triggering some of the seismicity in the region.
162                          Much of the induced seismicity in the United States' midcontinent is attribu
163                                              Seismicity in the western United States away from the pl
164 g to analyze the more complete expression of seismicity in these catalogs may be the fastest route to
165           We directly measure fault slip and seismicity induced by fluid injection into a natural fau
166 d seismicity in Europe and a rare example of seismicity induced by gas injection into a depleted oil
167  1439), we tested whether framing of induced seismicity influences support for changing regulations.
168                       The order parameter of seismicity introduced in this time domain is the varianc
169  thus show that the occurrence of background seismicity is an excellent parameter to monitor the curr
170                                              Seismicity is composed of isolated spatio-temporal clust
171 U.S. region to determine whether present-day seismicity is composed predominantly of aftershocks of t
172                                              Seismicity is concentrated in the central sub-basin and
173 ng where gravitational body forces encourage seismicity is crucial to understanding and appraising in
174 nderpin the link between fluid injection and seismicity is essential in efforts to mitigate the seism
175 e is calculated analytically; (3) background seismicity is explicitly considered within the forecasti
176                         The character of the seismicity is extremely sensitive to distributions of in
177 ometers) at Kilauea volcano demonstrate that seismicity is focused on an active fault zone at 30-kilo
178            Here, we show that the background seismicity is increasing at the same rate of (1) the gro
179                            Fault single-jerk seismicity is recorded by the presence of pristine quenc
180 e algorithm is self-adapting to the level of seismicity: it can be transferred without readaptation f
181 at earthquake interactions promote continued seismicity, leading to larger events.
182                                      Induced seismicity linked to geothermal resource exploitation, h
183                    Additionally, a column of seismicity links the sill complex to a shallow decolleme
184                                              Seismicity localization should occur where convective ch
185 tural gradients have been invoked to explain seismicity localization, the underlying cause of seismic
186 s prudent that pore pressure change, initial seismicity locations, and Coulomb static stress transfer
187  was aseismic, or associated with very light seismicity (magnitude <5 earthquakes).
188             Here we show that this triggered seismicity marked the beginning of a five-year trend, co
189          However, the extent to which nearby seismicity may drive or exacerbate methane emissions and
190 osed methodology, based primarily on in-slab seismicity, may help monitor plate boundary conditions a
191 unt Agung awoke in August 2017, with intense seismicity, measurable ground deformation, and thermal a
192 , Colorado (USA) oil field(4) suggested that seismicity might be turned on or off by cycling subsurfa
193                                              Seismicity migrates downwards from the caprock and chang
194 quence, high absorption, low scattering, and seismicity migration across a fault network suggest flui
195 l harmonic forcings that are responsible for seismicity modulation on the planetary bodies and their
196  time-dependent deformation influence on the seismicity modulation remains uncertain.
197 s appear to be more sensitive to long-period seismicity modulation, however, lacking in short-period
198                 From the global diversity in seismicity modulation, it has been observed that the pla
199 the Earth exhibit both short and long-period seismicity modulation.
200 leation by using the information in periodic seismicity modulations, which can be applicable to subdu
201 e detailed hydraulic stimulation and on-site seismicity monitoring data provide an unprecedented oppo
202 al represent the most likely cause of recent seismicity near Azle.
203 .5 2016-2017 Central Italy seismic sequence, seismicity not only localizes along the major structures
204 dicates that migrating patterns of 2015-2018 seismicity observed near Venus, TX are likely attributed
205                                              Seismicity occurred almost exclusively on a secondary fa
206                High rates of deformation and seismicity occurred from 24 February to mid-March in rel
207 beys to different scaling laws than on-fault seismicity occurring on structures characterized by elas
208 ugh of small amplitude, modulate the ongoing seismicity of the New Madrid region.
209                                              Seismicity of the plate boundary is therefore either non
210                                              Seismicity off the coast of Iquique started to increase
211  reveals that pore pressure changes initiate seismicity on critically stressed faults and Coulomb sta
212 he effective stress regime and anthropogenic seismicity on the basement faults in Delhi region.
213 ntrol may improve risk management of induced seismicity over a range of event magnitudes, if similar
214 ase ending with a decline in deformation and seismicity over several days preceding the eruption onse
215 rvoir drove 6.5 m of pre-eruptive uplift and seismicity over thirteen years, including an Mw5.4 earth
216 ting continental earthquakes as steady-state seismicity overestimates the hazard in presently active
217 s between blueschist-facies metamorphism and seismicity, particularly through dehydration reactions i
218  including interseismic strain and a bimodal seismicity pattern.
219 roaches to this problem have used precursory seismicity patterns that precede large earthquakes with
220 milar renormalizations for other premonitory seismicity patterns.
221 e the following causal mechanism for induced seismicity: pore pressure increase and earthquake intera
222                                      Induced seismicity potential is suppressed where tight confining
223 frastructure) or undermine (e.g., leakage or seismicity potential) this approach, but the sequestrati
224                            To understand the seismicity preceding this event, we studied the location
225 intrusion correlate temporally with recorded seismicity, providing evidence that some seismic events
226 luence the earthquake occurrence process and seismicity rate along the plate-boundary or 'stable' pla
227            This accord means that changes in seismicity rate are sufficiently predictable to be inclu
228 on to pore-pressure changes can increase the seismicity rate by 6-fold and 2-fold for central and wes
229 ify the spatial and temporal patterns of the seismicity rate changes.
230        We find that the stress dependence of seismicity rate conforms to triggering theory over the e
231                          The model forecasts seismicity rate during the test period based on input fe
232 hnique-the Random Forest to forecast induced seismicity rate in Oklahoma based on injection-related p
233 we compute the changes in crustal stress and seismicity rate in Oklahoma.
234                                          The seismicity rate increase was to the north for the Lander
235                                    Triggered seismicity rate increases may therefore be most likely t
236 ali, Alaska, earthquake triggered widespread seismicity rate increases throughout British Columbia an
237 ations radiated as seismic waves can trigger seismicity rate increases, as proposed for the Landers e
238               The low magnitude but moderate seismicity rate of Delhi region on the stable plate-inte
239 seismicity rate; (2) the spatial integral of seismicity rate over the whole aftershock zone is calcul
240                       In western Taiwan, the seismicity rate reaches peak levels in February to April
241 rshock duration is consistent with models of seismicity rate variations based on rate- and state-depe
242  the regional scale, the timing of predicted seismicity rate, as opposed to its pattern and amplitude
243  the piecewise stationary integration of the seismicity rate; (2) the spatial integral of seismicity
244 mes after the mainshock, when low background seismicity rates allow for good aftershock detection, th
245  elsewhere might go undetected if background seismicity rates are low.
246                     We infer that California seismicity rates are modestly modulated by natural hydro
247 urface deformation, hydrological loading and seismicity rates at both annual and multi-annual timesca
248 arkfield and potentially affecting long-term seismicity rates for fault systems adjacent to the valle
249 dence and reduction in stress and background seismicity rates, equivalent dynamic strains no longer t
250 mation, induce crustal stresses and modulate seismicity rates.
251        The UK had the most stringent induced seismicity regulations in the world, prior to instating
252                                   Leveraging seismicity relocations, here we obtain high resolution,
253 n under the Japan Sea and associated current seismicity remain challenging.
254 nd how fault roughness affects fluid-induced seismicity remains elusive.
255 micity localization, the underlying cause of seismicity remains unclear.
256  ways to assess seismic hazards and forecast seismicity response to perturbations of natural or anthr
257                 The more complete picture of seismicity revealed a sharply defined caldera ring fault
258               It is widely believed that the seismicity risk can be controlled by using doublet syste
259 traffic light protocols and managing induced seismicity risks.
260 cool subduction zones exhibit differences in seismicity, seismic structure, and arc magmatism, which
261 ve been limited to a single operation and/or seismicity sequence.
262 apid pressure/stress transmission in induced seismicity sequences.
263                                         That seismicity shows vertical distributions extending from t
264 s with previously observed week-long shallow seismicity south of LASSIE array in Long Beach.
265 ales, as evidenced by abnormal low-magnitude seismicity spreading over the ~15-25% of Southern Califo
266 nnot depend on the average properties of the seismicity, such as the Gutenberg-Richter (G-R) distribu
267 jection-induced stress changes would promote seismicity, suggests a regional tectonic control on the
268 tood and are less prone to injection-induced seismicity than saline aquifers.
269 ing an extensive history of great earthquake seismicity that caused large shallow slip.
270 lthough models of homogeneous faults develop seismicity that has a Gutenberg-Richter distribution, th
271   One of the main concerns of DGE is induced seismicity that may produce damaging earthquakes, challe
272                                              Seismicity that occurs after the causative anthropogenic
273 kes (DLPs) are an enigmatic type of volcanic seismicity that sometimes precedes eruptions but mostly
274 ion and recovery of the repeating precursory seismicity that was recorded before the main landslide r
275 nt implications for interpretation of distal seismicity, the links between closely spaced arc volcano
276                                  For induced seismicity, the non-stationary, heterogeneous character
277  phenomena, such as the remote triggering of seismicity, there has been no means of actually monitori
278 ress transfer (CST) because it is common for seismicity to circumvent nearest-neighbour along-strike
279 e integrate new seismic images with regional seismicity to investigate an actively fragmenting subduc
280  We first gauge the response of the regional seismicity to the Landers event with a new technique, an
281            Drainage coincided with increased seismicity, transient acceleration, ice-sheet uplift, an
282                              Here we present seismicity transients starting approx. 8 months before t
283           Amongst public concerns is induced seismicity (tremors).
284 ay help to explain earthquake clustering and seismicity triggering by shaking, and may be involved in
285 etreat may increase regional glacioisostatic seismicity, triggering Antarctic submarine landslides.
286                                    Localized seismicity under fault zones suggests that the deep exte
287  wastewater injection and U.S. mid-continent seismicity using a newly assembled injection well databa
288 ciplinary methodology for managing triggered seismicity using comprehensive and detailed information
289 l and multi-annual timescales indicates that seismicity variations are the direct result of elastic s
290               Claims of industrially induced seismicity vary from indisputable to unpersuasive and ye
291 the pre-eruptive patterns of deformation and seismicity vary widely.
292 magery and 3D numerical models, we show that seismicity was associated with a deep, sub-vertical magm
293                                    Increased seismicity was recorded on the middle to lower ERZ from
294        To explore the causes of this bimodal seismicity, we developed a two-dimensional, seismic cycl
295 e orogen has resulted in damaging historical seismicity, whereas south of the Main Frontal Thrust (MF
296 ions is very likely to trigger large induced seismicity, which may damage the caprock and ruin the ob
297  radiant temperature, and increased regional seismicity, which may indicate that magmatic processes p
298                              Here we analyze seismicity within a subducting oceanic slab, spanning ~5
299               The perturbation of short-term seismicity within teleseismic surface waves also increas
300            The physical processes generating seismicity within volcanic edifices are highly complex a

 
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