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Uniform California Earthquake Rupture Forecast, Version 3 (UCERF3) —The Time-Independent Model

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Uniform California Earthquake Rupture Forecast, Version 3 (UCERF3) —The Time-Independent Model
Names Field, Edward H. (creator)
Arrowsmith, Ramon J. (creator)
Biasi, Glenn P. (creator)
Madden, Christopher (creator)
et al. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-06 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the Seismological Society of America and can be found at: http://www.seismosoc.org/publications/bssa/.
Abstract The 2014 Working Group on California Earthquake Probabilities
(WGCEP14) present the time-independent component of the Uniform California
Earthquake Rupture Forecast, Version 3 (UCERF3), which provides authoritative
estimates of the magnitude, location, and time-averaged frequency of potentially
damaging earthquakes in California. The primary achievements have been to relax
fault segmentation and include multifault ruptures, both limitations of UCERF2.
The rates of all earthquakes are solved for simultaneously and from a broader range
of data, using a system-level inversion that is both conceptually simple and extensible.
The inverse problem is large and underdetermined, so a range of models is
sampled using an efficient simulated annealing algorithm. The approach is more
derivative than prescriptive (e.g., magnitude–frequency distributions are no longer
assumed), so new analysis tools were developed for exploring solutions. Epistemic
uncertainties were also accounted for using 1440 alternative logic-tree branches,
necessitating access to supercomputers. The most influential uncertainties include
alternative deformation models (fault slip rates), a new smoothed seismicity algorithm,
alternative values for the total rate of M[subscript w] ≥ 5 events, and different scaling
relationships, virtually all of which are new. As a notable first, three deformation
models are based on kinematically consistent inversions of geodetic and geologic
data, also providing slip-rate constraints on faults previously excluded due to lack
of geologic data. The grand inversion constitutes a system-level framework for
testing hypotheses and balancing the influence of different experts. For example,
we demonstrate serious challenges with the Gutenberg–Richter hypothesis for
individual faults. UCERF3 is still an approximation of the system, however, and
the range of models is limited (e.g., constrained to stay close to UCERF2). Nevertheless,
UCERF3 removes the apparent UCERF2 overprediction of M 6.5–7 earthquake
rates and also includes types of multifault ruptures seen in nature. Although
UCERF3 fits the data better than UCERF2 overall, there may be areas that warrant
further site-specific investigation. Supporting products may be of general interest,
and we list key assumptions and avenues for future model improvements.
Genre Article
Identifier Field, E. H., Arrowsmith, R. J., Biasi, G. P., Bird, P., Dawson, T. E., Felzer, K. R., ... & Zeng, Y. (2014). Uniform California Earthquake Rupture Forecast, Version 3 (UCERF3)—The Time‐Independent Model. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 104(3), 1122-1180. doi:10.1785/0120130164

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