2014
DOI: 10.15517/rgac.v0i0.16569
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Distribución espacio-temporal de la sismicidad sentida en Costa Rica (1976-2013) en el marco histórico del 30 aniversario (1982-2012) de la Red Sismológica Nacional (RSN: UCR-ICE)

Abstract: ABSTRACT:The National Seismological Network of Costa Rica (RSN) was created in 1982 through an agreement between the Central American School of Geology of the University of Costa Rica and the Costa Rican Institute of Electricity. In this paper, we present a short review of the RSN contributions in Seismology to the Journal of Geology of Central America (RGAC) that is expressed in 63 publications. We also analyze the geographic and temporal distribution of 3363 earthquakes reported by the RSN through media repo… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…With the examples presented here, where alerts have been provided within 11 s of event initiation, we can expect late alerts for all shallow crustal events within 40 km of the capital. Unfortunately, if the present network delivers EEW, this would mean late alerts for repeats of some historically destructive events near San Jose, such as the Cartago earthquake (M 6.4) in 1910 (Montero and Miyamura, 1981) and the Cinchona earthquake (Mw 6.1) in 2009 (Linkimer and Alvarado, 2014), which were originated by local faults with epicenters at 20 and 30 km of the city, respectively. The alert time is modest (<5 s) for seismic events close to San Jose originated in the subduction zone, such as the 1990 Cobano (Mw 7.0) and 1999 Quepos (Mw 6.9) earthquakes, and at intermediate depth in the subducting slab, like the 1992 Naranjo earthquake (Mw 6.5).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…With the examples presented here, where alerts have been provided within 11 s of event initiation, we can expect late alerts for all shallow crustal events within 40 km of the capital. Unfortunately, if the present network delivers EEW, this would mean late alerts for repeats of some historically destructive events near San Jose, such as the Cartago earthquake (M 6.4) in 1910 (Montero and Miyamura, 1981) and the Cinchona earthquake (Mw 6.1) in 2009 (Linkimer and Alvarado, 2014), which were originated by local faults with epicenters at 20 and 30 km of the city, respectively. The alert time is modest (<5 s) for seismic events close to San Jose originated in the subduction zone, such as the 1990 Cobano (Mw 7.0) and 1999 Quepos (Mw 6.9) earthquakes, and at intermediate depth in the subducting slab, like the 1992 Naranjo earthquake (Mw 6.5).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This complex tectonic setting generates high-seismicity rates. Since 1821, the nation has faced 68 damaging earthquakes, with an average rate of one every three years (Montero, 1989;Peraldo and Montero, 1994;Linkimer and Alvarado, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Por esta razón, la cantidad y densidad de sismos por cantón no necesariamente corresponde con una mayor percepción de la sismicidad en dichas zonas. En relación con los sismos que han sido reportados como sentidos a la RSN (Linkimer y Alvarado, 2014), los cantones de Pérez Zeledón, Turrialba y El Guarco han sido el escenario de la mayor cantidad de estos sismos sentidos. Esto concuerda con los resultados obtenidos que muestran que, Pérez Zeledón y Turrialba son cantones con alta cantidad de sismos y El Guarco un cantón con una densidad de sismos alta (Figura 4).…”
Section: Sismicidad Por Cantonesunclassified
“…Esta situación obedece a su ubicación en una zona de subducción en donde interactúan cuatro placas tectónicas: Coco, Caribe, Nazca y Panamá (figura 1). Desde 1821, el país ha sufrido el embate de 68 terremotos, 20 de los cuales han tenido magnitud mayor a 7,0 (Montero, 1989;Peraldo y Montero, 1994;Linkimer y Alvarado, 2014). Entre los terremotos más recientes, se pueden contar el de Cinchona en el 2009 (magnitud 6,1) y el de Nicoya en el 2012 (7,6).…”
Section: Introductionunclassified