2006
DOI: 10.1785/0120060051
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Local Earthquake Magnitude Scale and Seismicity Rate for the Ethiopian Rift

Abstract: A calibrated local earthquake magnitude scale is essential for quantitative analyses of seismicity. In Ethiopia, effective monitoring of earthquakes and resulting assessment of seismic hazard are especially important as regions with seismic and volcanic activity coincide with regions of economic significance and population growth. We have developed a local magnitude (M L ) scale for the northern Main Ethiopian rift (MER) using earthquake data collected during 2001-2003 on 122 three-component broadband seismic … Show more

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Cited by 87 publications
(76 citation statements)
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“…Our new attenuation curve shows that at hypocentral distances of less than 100 km, the attenuation in Danakil is very similar to that in the Main Ethiopian rift and in southern California (Hutton and Boore, 1987;Keir et al, 2006). High attenuation in southern California is explained by high geothermal gradients beneath the San Gabriel Mountains (Schlotterbeck and Abers, 2001).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 54%
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“…Our new attenuation curve shows that at hypocentral distances of less than 100 km, the attenuation in Danakil is very similar to that in the Main Ethiopian rift and in southern California (Hutton and Boore, 1987;Keir et al, 2006). High attenuation in southern California is explained by high geothermal gradients beneath the San Gabriel Mountains (Schlotterbeck and Abers, 2001).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 54%
“…The direct inversion method is computationally much faster and has been tested by Pujol (2003) on data from Tanzania that was previously analyzed using the iterative technique (Langston et al, 1998). The method used in this study has been tested on data from the Main Ethiopian rift and yielded identical results to those produced by Keir et al (2006).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 94%
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“…Along the axis of the Main Ethiopian Rift, earthquakes are predominantly localized to depths of less than ~15 km within 20-km-wide, right-stepping, en-echelon zones of Quaternary volcanism and faulting. Seismicity in these zones is characterized by low-magnitude (M L ~1-4) clusters (Keir et al, 2006a) coincident with Quaternary faults, fi ssures, and chains of eruptive centers. All but three focal mechanisms show normal dip-slip motion; the minimum compressive stress is N103°E, perpendicular to Quaternary faults and aligned volcanic cones (Fig.…”
Section: Seismicitymentioning
confidence: 99%