Title: Relations between fault and earthquake properties
Abstract:I examine the relations between the properties of long-term geological faults and the properties of the large earthquakes these faults produce. I have gathered available seismological information on l...I examine the relations between the properties of long-term geological faults and the properties of the large earthquakes these faults produce. I have gathered available seismological information on large historical earthquakes worldwide and mapped in detail, on satellite images, both the long-term fault and the rupture traces. The combined analysis of the data shows that: i) long-term faults have a number of generic properties (arrangement of overall fault networks, lateral segmentation of fault traces, form of cumulative slip distribution, etc); ii) large earthquakes also have generic properties (similarity of envelope shape of coseismic slip-length profiles, of decrease in rupture width along rupture length, of number of broken segments, of stress drop on broken segments, of relative distance between hypocenter and zone of maximum slip, etc); iii) the structural maturity of the faults is the tectonic property most impacting the behavior of large earthquakes. The maturity likely acts in reducing both the static friction and the geometric complexity of the fault plane. It partly governs the location of the earthquake initiation, the location and amplitude of the maximum coseismic slip, the direction of the coseismic slip decrease, the rupture propagation efficiency and speed, the number of major fault segments that are broken, and hence the rupture length and its overall stress drop. To understand the physics of earthquakes, it thus seems necessary to analyze jointly the tectonic properties of the broken faults and the seismological properties of the earthquakes.Read More