Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/8788
Authors: Bindi, D.* 
Parolai, S.* 
Gomez Capera, A. A.* 
Locati, M.* 
Kalmetyeva, Z.* 
Mikhailova, N.* 
Title: Locations and magnitudes of earthquakes in Central Asia from seismic intensity data
Journal: Journal of Seismology 
Series/Report no.: /18 (2013)
Publisher: Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
Issue Date: 31-Oct-2013
DOI: 10.1007/s10950-013-9392-1
Keywords: Intensity data . Historical earthquake . Central Asia
Subject Classification04. Solid Earth::04.06. Seismology::04.06.05. Historical seismology 
Abstract: We apply the Bakun and Wentworth (Bull Seism Soc Am 87:1502–1521, 1997) method to determine the location and magnitude of earthquakes occurred in Central Asia using MSK-64 intensity assignments. The attenuation model previously derived and validated by Bindi et al. (Geophys J Int, 2013) is used to analyse 21 earthquakes that occurred over the period 1885–1964, and the estimated locations and magnitudes are compared to values available in literature. Bootstrap analyses are performed to estimate the confidence intervals of the intensity magnitudes, as well as to quantify the location uncertainty. The analyses of seven significant earthquakes for the hazard assessment are presented in detail, including three large historical earthquakes that struck the northern Tien-Shan between the end of the nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth centuries: the 1887, M 7.3 Verny, the 1889, M 8.3 Chilik and the 1911, M 8.2 Kemin earthquakes. Regarding the 1911, Kemin earthquake the magnitude values estimated from intensity data are lower (i.e.MILH=7.8 andMIW=7.6 considering surface wave and moment magnitude, respectively) than the value M=8.2 listed in the considered catalog. These values are more in agreement with the value MS=7.8 revised by Abe and Noguchi (Phys Earth Planet In, 33:1–11, 1983b) for the surface wave magnitude. For the Kemin earthquake, the distribution of the bootstrap solutions for the intensity centre reveal two minima, indicating that the distribution of intensity assignments do not constrain a unique solution. This is in agreement with the complex source rupture history of the Kemin earthquake, which involved several fault segments with different strike orientations, dipping angles and focal mechanisms (e.g. Delvaux et al. in Russ Geol Geophys 42:1167–1177, 2001; Arrowsmith et al. in Eos Trans Am Geophys Union 86(52), 2005). Two possible locations for the intensity centre are obtained. The first is located on the easternmost sub-faults (i.e. the Aksu and Chon-Aksu segments), wheremost of the seismicmoment was released (Arrowsmith et al. in Eos Trans Am Geophys Union 86(52), 2005). The second location is located on the westernmost sub-faults (i.e. the Dzhil'-Aryk segment), close to the intensity centre location obtained for the 1938, M 6.9 Chu-Kemin earthquake (MILH=6.9 and MIW=6.8).
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