2014
DOI: 10.1130/g36161y.1
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Can turbidites be used to reconstruct a paleoearthquake record for the central Sumatran margin?: REPLY

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 8 publications
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“…After the initial tests on limited cores for the general feasibility and the ease of a record compilation, thorough comparison to known historical and paleoseismic events from other archives should be established to obtain a better understanding of the test core archive to capture seismically induced turbidites and/ or the probability of turbidite generation through great events. Depending on the data set, these tests may not lead to the same conclusions, even along the same margin (Goldfinger et al, , 2014Patton et al, 2013;Sumner et al, 2013Sumner et al, , 2014Atwater et al, 2014) and the entirety of the available data has to be regarded.…”
Section: General Implications For Turbidite Paleoseismologymentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…After the initial tests on limited cores for the general feasibility and the ease of a record compilation, thorough comparison to known historical and paleoseismic events from other archives should be established to obtain a better understanding of the test core archive to capture seismically induced turbidites and/ or the probability of turbidite generation through great events. Depending on the data set, these tests may not lead to the same conclusions, even along the same margin (Goldfinger et al, , 2014Patton et al, 2013;Sumner et al, 2013Sumner et al, , 2014Atwater et al, 2014) and the entirety of the available data has to be regarded.…”
Section: General Implications For Turbidite Paleoseismologymentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Furthermore, the details of site selection with regard to the specific depositional environment, sediment gravity flow paths, variations of sediment supply, and to the position within seismic segments or individual earthquake rupture zones are strongly debated (Goldfinger et al, , 2014Patton et al, 2013;Sumner et al, 2013Sumner et al, , 2014Atwater et al, 2014). Until the underlying controls of why a submarine slope is predisposed to widespread failure are better understood, turbidite paleoseismology should be applied with considerable caution (e.g., Sumner et al, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%