New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics abstracts
The precursory earthquake swarm in New Zealand: hypothesis tests II
F. F. EVISON
Institute of Geophysics
Victoria University of Wellington
P.O. Box 600
Wellington, New Zealand
D. A. RHOADES
Institute of Geological & Nuclear Sciences
P.O. Box 30 368
Lower Hutt, New Zealand
Abstract A series of tests is being carried out with the
object of determining whether the relations evident in New Zealand and Japan,
between precursory swarms and major earthquakes, are of value for long-range,
synoptic earthquake forecasting. The first New Zealand test (completed in 1990)
showed that clustering, both of swarms and of mainshock events, should be
allowed for, and the hypothesis was reformulated accordingly.
The second New Zealand test, now completed, confirms the importance of
clustering. It also reveals that the applicability of the swarm/mainshock
relations is strongly affected by large-scale tectonics. Further, a simulation
study shows that, at the end of the test, the performance of the swarm
hypothesis relative to the Poisson model lay between what would be expected if
the hypothesis and the Poisson model, respectively, were correct in general.
These results support a further reformulation of the hypothesis, which is now
taken to be strongly applicable in the Hikurangi and Fiordland subduction
zones, not at all in the region of Quaternary volcanism, and weakly elsewhere.
This change and the provision for clustering made previously bring the present
New Zealand formulation close to that under test in the Japan region.
The third New Zealand test commenced on 20 December 1995 and is still in
progress.
Keywords long-range earthquake forecasting; precursory
earthquake swarm; earthquake clustering; hypothesis testing
New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 1997, Vol. 40: 537-547
0028-8306/97/4004-0537 $7.00/0 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand
1997
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