“…In addition, velocities recorded by continuous GNSS stations during the first months following major earthquakes are faster than predicted using such viscosities (Figure S1 in the supporting information) (Pollitz et al, ; Trubienko et al, ). Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain those observations: (1) rapidly decaying slip on the ruptured fault or in its vicinity, commonly referred to as afterslip (Barbot et al, ; Fialko, ; Freed, ; Klein et al, ; Marone et al, ; Perfettini & Avouac, ; Savage et al, ), a mechanism often favored for explaining near‐field observations (Ingleby & Wright, ), and (2) viscoelastic relaxation of coseismic stresses in the lower crust and upper mantle, with multiple relaxation times and/or stress‐dependent viscosities (Chandrasekhar et al, ; DeVries & Meade, ; Freed & Bürgmann, ; Pollitz, ; Pollitz & Thatcher, ; Pollitz et al, ; Ryder et al, ; Trubienko et al, ). Identifying the respective contributions of these various mechanisms is challenging but is key to a better understanding of the seismic cycle and to the potential link between aftershocks and postseismic deformation.…”