MegaChile project (Nov 2012 - Dec 2016) is funded by the ANR (Agence Nationale de la Recherche)
Showing posts with label results. Show all posts
Showing posts with label results. Show all posts
Thursday, November 24, 2016
Saturday, April 30, 2016
Illapel Sept 2015 earthquake from Sentinel 1 satellite
#Sentinel1 goes 3D! Paper https://t.co/2TPzXPhsjr #InSAR @pmar @FraxInSAR @GeoAndyHooper @IPGP_officiel @theAGU pic.twitter.com/3b4S9lFXab— Raphael Grandin (@RaphaelGrandin) 10 mars 2016
Monday, April 11, 2016
San Ramón Fault facing Santiago
San Ramón mountain front facing Santiago #Chile - Recall papers: https://t.co/PLUMXPfARa & https://t.co/edMGmJBBuy pic.twitter.com/db5dpQ3hCD
— Robin Lacassin (@RLacassin) 11 avril 2016
Friday, July 17, 2015
Reports of 2013 and 2014 activities and results
New "Reports" page giving access to detailed description of activities and results.
Friday, April 11, 2014
Megathrust ruptures in North Chile
NEW publication :
Ruiz, S, Metois, M, Fuenzalida, A, Ruiz, J, Leyton, F, Grandin, R, Vigny, C, Madariaga, R, Campos, J,Intense foreshocks and a slow slip event preceded the 2014 Iquique Mw 8.1 earthquake, SCIENCE, 345, 6201, 1165-1169, 2014.
A great earthquake, with magnitude between 8.0 (Geoscope-Scardec) and 8.2 (USGS) has occurred on 1 April 2014 in northern Chile (local time, or 2 April 2014 UTC). The main event was followed 24 hours later by a magnitude 7.6 earthquake. These earthquakes have broken the subduction interface that marks the separation between the Nazca oceanic plate and the South American continental plate
These earthquakes have contributed to an increase in the stress acting on the neighboring segments of the mega-thrust, to the north and to the south of the segment that has just broken. The probability that earthquakes of similar type, with magnitudes exceeding 8.0 or more, in the next days, weeks or years, is therefore rather high. Currently, it is impossible to exclude the possibility that another "giant" earthquake, with magnitude 8.5 up to 9.0, could break the whole remaining segments of the Arica gap, to the north up to Peru, and to the south down to the Mejillones peninsula (located to the north of the city of Antofagasta).
MegaChile researchers are deeply involved in the study of the April 2014 earthquakes within the framework of the Associated Laboratory "Montessus de Ballore", which gathers ENS, IPGP, and the University of Chile. A joint IPGP-ENS team is currently participating to a survey in the field in order to measure the precise location of GPS markers, within a survey program coordinated by the Geophysics Department of the University of Chile. More actions (seismology, geodesy, tectonics) are under way.
Read more on IPGP special page, GEOSCOPE pages for the main earthquake (M8) and for the magnitude 7.6 event, INSU-CNRS special pages : " page séisme au Chili " and " un point plus complet sur les informations scientifiques " (both in french)
Ruiz, S, Metois, M, Fuenzalida, A, Ruiz, J, Leyton, F, Grandin, R, Vigny, C, Madariaga, R, Campos, J,Intense foreshocks and a slow slip event preceded the 2014 Iquique Mw 8.1 earthquake, SCIENCE, 345, 6201, 1165-1169, 2014.
A great earthquake, with magnitude between 8.0 (Geoscope-Scardec) and 8.2 (USGS) has occurred on 1 April 2014 in northern Chile (local time, or 2 April 2014 UTC). The main event was followed 24 hours later by a magnitude 7.6 earthquake. These earthquakes have broken the subduction interface that marks the separation between the Nazca oceanic plate and the South American continental plate
These earthquakes have contributed to an increase in the stress acting on the neighboring segments of the mega-thrust, to the north and to the south of the segment that has just broken. The probability that earthquakes of similar type, with magnitudes exceeding 8.0 or more, in the next days, weeks or years, is therefore rather high. Currently, it is impossible to exclude the possibility that another "giant" earthquake, with magnitude 8.5 up to 9.0, could break the whole remaining segments of the Arica gap, to the north up to Peru, and to the south down to the Mejillones peninsula (located to the north of the city of Antofagasta).
MegaChile researchers are deeply involved in the study of the April 2014 earthquakes within the framework of the Associated Laboratory "Montessus de Ballore", which gathers ENS, IPGP, and the University of Chile. A joint IPGP-ENS team is currently participating to a survey in the field in order to measure the precise location of GPS markers, within a survey program coordinated by the Geophysics Department of the University of Chile. More actions (seismology, geodesy, tectonics) are under way.
Read more on IPGP special page, GEOSCOPE pages for the main earthquake (M8) and for the magnitude 7.6 event, INSU-CNRS special pages : " page séisme au Chili " and " un point plus complet sur les informations scientifiques " (both in french)
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