Author/Authors :
David A. Rhoades ، نويسنده , , Frank F. Evison، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Scaling relations previously derived from examples of the precursory scale increase before
major earthquakes show that the precursor is a long-term predictor of the time, magnitude, and location of
the major earthquake. These relations are here taken as the basis of a stochastic forecasting model in which
every earthquake is regarded as a precursor. The problem of identifying those earthquakes that are actually
precursory is thus set aside, at the cost of limiting the strength of the resulting forecast. The contribution of
an individual earthquake to the future distribution of hazard in time, magnitude and location is on a scale
determined, through the scaling relations, by its magnitude. Provision is made for a contribution to be
affected by other earthquakes close in time and location, e.g., an aftershock may be given low weight.
Using the New Zealand catalogue, the model has been fitted to the forecasting of shallow earthquakes
exceeding magnitude 5.75 over the period 1965–2000. It fits the data much better than a baseline Poisson
model with a location distribution based on proximity to the epicenters of past earthquakes. Further, the
model has been applied, with unchanged parameters, to the California region over the period 1975–2001.
There also, it performs much better than the baseline model fitted to the same region over the period 1951–
1974; the likelihood ratio is 1015 in favor of the present model.
These results lend credence to the precursory scale increase phenomenon, and show that the scaling
relations are pervasive in earthquake catalogues. The forecasting model provides a new baseline model
against which future refinements, and other proposed models, can be tested. It may also prove to be useful
in practice. Its applicability to other regions has still to be established.
Keywords :
Earthquake precursors , Stochastic model , New Zealand , California , earthquake prediction