a new approach to paleoseismic event correlation

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A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation Glenn Biasi and Ray Weldon University of Nevada Reno Acknowledgments: Tom Fumal, Kate Scharer, SCEC and the USGS.

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A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation. Glenn Biasi and Ray Weldon University of Nevada Reno Acknowledgments: Tom Fumal, Kate Scharer, SCEC and the USGS. Big Question. How do we estimate seismic hazard when we can’t prove events correlate between paleoseismic sites? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event

Correlation

Glenn Biasi and Ray Weldon

University of Nevada RenoAcknowledgments:

Tom Fumal, Kate Scharer, SCEC and the USGS.

Page 2: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

Big Question

• How do we estimate seismic hazard when we can’t prove events correlate between paleoseismic sites?– Why it matters (1):

• If they correlate: longer, less frequent ruptures• If not: shorter, more frequent ruptures.

– Why it matters (2): • Support for future paleoseismic investigations.

Page 3: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

0 2000Calendar Year

The Data: Paleoseismic event date pdf’s.

Page 4: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

Correlating Events Between Paleoseismic Sites

• Time correlation is not likely to ever be entirely convincing.

• Example: two exactly overlapping uniform date pdf’s six years wide give 1/6 chance that the events are in the same year.

• Probabilities of correlation based on displacement fall off with site separation (ask me later what can be done).

Page 5: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

Ways to build a rupture history (1)

N. Bend/S. Bend

No pattern

Bigevents

Example from Weldon et al. (2004) Science

Page 6: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

Ways (2) Pearls to Scenarios

• Find all ruptures consistent at some level with the data

• Build a large suite of rupture scenarios• Select likely histories using other

constraints (slip rate, dating consistency, etc.)

• Study the properties of likely histories for recurrence, segmentation, etc.

Page 7: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation
Page 8: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

Pair-wise joint probability range: ~3e-2 to 3e-3; -> absolute likelihoods are all small

Linking involves some rules for overlap.

Rules don’t seem to dominate results.

Page 9: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

Example ruptures.

Page 10: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

Building Scenarios from Ruptures• Draw from all possible ruptures until each paleoquake

is included exactly once. • Scenario is one possible history of rupture on the fault.

Construct 10,000 scenarios.• Core rupture lengths set by sites in rupture.• Tails added by drawing around the average per-event

displacement d, then tapering by 9900*d. Use measured d where available.

• Tail truncated if rupture would cross a neighboring site.• Tails can extend into creeping zone and Bombay

Beach.

Page 11: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

Scoring Scenarios

• Degree of time agreement in ruptures

• Total displacement compared to rupture prediction in some time.

• Recurrence rate in light of hiatus since 1857 (number of ruptures)

Page 12: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

The lack of a southern SAF earthquake since 1857 constrains the probable number of ruptures in viable scenarios.

E.g., 15 rupture scenarios are twice as likely as 22 rupture scenarios.

Page 13: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation
Page 14: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

Fewest rupturescase.

Two wall-to-wall(W2W) ruptures since AD 900.Displacementscales with length.

W2W causeserious over-prediction oftotal displace-ment. (14.7 mmean).

How muchmisfit is toomuch?

Segmentbounds(WGCEP) -frequencyof single- and multiplesegment rupturesfall outdirectly.

Page 15: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

predicted fromslip rate Coachella

misfit

No wall-to-wallevents; 2 pre-1857 north-bendevents, onebigger.

WW:several shortevents - un-correlated.

maximum displacement among all ruptures.

Best case: 1.43 m. avg. misfit.

Max age of complete record.

Page 16: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

Time overlapscore

Product timescore vs.displace-ment fit.

Displ. vs. # of ruptures;trend below 21 rupturesis too few.

Productscore vs. # of ruptures

Displ. scorevs. rupture number

No. Ruptures

Dis

pl. S

core

Tim

e S

core

No. Ruptures

Best time scores

Fewest ruptures, okaydispl. scores

Best displ. scores

Page 17: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation
Page 18: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation
Page 19: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation
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Page 21: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

Ensembles of scenarios => probabilities of single and multiple-segment ruptures.

20 scenarios - ~450 ruptures.

Rules for counting segments are required.

segs 1, 2

no segs

seg 2, but L1>L2

Applications of Rupture Scenarios (2)

L1 L2

Page 22: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

Conclusions for Data Collection

• Complete count and rough event dates are most valuable

• Don’t need great dating precision (but don’t stop trying to get it)

• Slip-per event measurements are valuable• New sites are most valuable in large spatial

gaps.• Do need geologic or geodetic slip rates

Page 23: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

Conclusions for Hazard Estimation

• Scenarios include earthquake location, magnitude, and frequency: essentials for seismic hazard estimation

• Ensembles of likely scenarios support hazard calculations without having to resolve the per-event correlation issues

• Scenarios are data-based - the paleoseismic record.

• Can quantify single- and multi-segment rupture frequency for the whole fault (or use it to question segmentation!)

Page 24: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation
Page 25: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

Surface Slip versus Rupture Length

Relationship for reverse and normal may be linear but may NOT for strike-slip

Rate of increase of strike-slip decreases with length for strike-slip without apparently reaching a plateau.

Page 26: A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation

Pallett Cr. - Wrightwood

Pallett Cr. - Carrizo

Having rupture displacements helps.

Even with displacement measurements, P(correl) is often small.

This case: all magnitudes

equally likely: