According to GPS monitoring, recent tectonic process between Tarim and West Siberia in the band within 80°–95° E is generated by the northward movement of the Tarim block. During the accompanying horizontal compression of the area, orogeny takes place within linear mobile zones when blocks are squeezed into the upper half-space. When the orientation of the mobile zones is transverse to the compression direction, the leading orogenic process is reverse faulting. When these directions intersect at an acute angle, the principal features of the mountain relief are formed by oblique-slip and strike-slip faults.
The spatial distribution of seismic activity A10 over a 40-year period of instrumental observations within the mobile zones of the study area is extremely nonuniform. Seismic activity increases to the south, toward the source of deformations—the Indo-Eurasian collision. The maximum activity is observed at the reverse-fault boundaries of the eastern Tien Shan (~40). The seismic activity of the strike-slip fault boundaries of the Great Altai is considerably lower (0.11–0.16).
Based on the joint analysis of the seismic regime parameters, such as anomalies of seismic energy release, b-value, seismic activity A10, approaches to assess the state of the block-seismic medium are proposed. The method validation was done for the example of preparation and development of seismic activity in 2008-2011 in the Central part of the Baikal rift, during which there were 2 strong M5.3 earthquakes. It was found that within 2 years before the strong Maximihinskoye Earthquake of 2008 in the Earth's crust of the epicentral region there is a transformation from softening to strengthening (consolidation) of the block medium. At the same time, in the neighboring region (the area of the Svyatoy Nos Peninsula), the opposite nature of the changes is observed.
The aseismic structure identified by the analysis of seismicity in the region of Olkhon Island which is associated with the central part of the Shebarta complex, composed of metamorphic rocks. The effect of subsidence of the seismically active layer under Olkhon Island is observed, and it rises to the center of the Baikal depression.
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