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      The Italian earthquake catalogue CPTI15

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          Measurement Error Models

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            Variations in earthquake-size distribution across different stress regimes.

            The earthquake size distribution follows, in most instances, a power law, with the slope of this power law, the 'b value', commonly used to describe the relative occurrence of large and small events (a high b value indicates a larger proportion of small earthquakes, and vice versa). Statistically significant variations of b values have been measured in laboratory experiments, mines and various tectonic regimes such as subducting slabs, near magma chambers, along fault zones and in aftershock zones. However, it has remained uncertain whether these differences are due to differing stress regimes, as it was questionable that samples in small volumes (such as in laboratory specimens, mines and the shallow Earth's crust) are representative of earthquakes in general. Given the lack of physical understanding of these differences, the observation that b values approach the constant 1 if large volumes are sampled was interpreted to indicate that b = 1 is a universal constant for earthquakes in general. Here we show that the b value varies systematically for different styles of faulting. We find that normal faulting events have the highest b values, thrust events the lowest and strike-slip events intermediate values. Given that thrust faults tend to be under higher stress than normal faults we infer that the b value acts as a stress meter that depends inversely on differential stress.
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              Assessing the Quality of Earthquake Catalogues: Estimating the Magnitude of Completeness and Its Uncertainty

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Bulletin of Earthquake Engineering
                Bull Earthquake Eng
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                1570-761X
                1573-1456
                May 2020
                March 16 2020
                May 2020
                : 18
                : 7
                : 2953-2984
                Article
                10.1007/s10518-020-00818-y
                c7d058b4-6bab-4c8b-9e0d-1380c2207492
                © 2020

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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