Author/Authors :
Chi-Yu King، نويسنده , , Wei Zhang، نويسنده , , Zhaocheng Zhang ، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Active faults are commonly associated with spatially anomalously high concentrations of
soil gases such as carbon dioxide and Rn, suggesting that they are crustal discontinuities with a relatively
high vertical permeability through which crustal and subcrustal gases may preferably escape towards the
earth’s surface. Many earthquake-related hydrologic and geochemical temporal changes have been
recorded, mostly along active faults especially at fault intersections, since the 1960s. The reality of such
changes is gradually ascertained and their features well delineated and fairly understood. Some coseismic
changes recorded in ‘‘near field’’ are rather consistent with poroelastic dislocation models of earthquake
sources, whereas others are attributable to near-surface permeability enhancement. In addition, coseismic
(and postseismic) changes were recorded for many moderate to large earthquakes at certain relatively few
‘‘sensitive sites’’ at epicentral distances too large (larger for larger earthquakes, up to 1000 km or more for
magnitude 8) to be explained by the poroelastic models. They are probably triggered by seismic shaking.
The sensitivity of different sites can be greatly different, even when separated only by meters. The sensitive
sites are usually located on or near active faults, especially their intersections and bends, and characterized
by some near-critical hydrologic or geochemical condition (e.g., permeability that can be greatly increased
by a relatively small seismic shaking or stress increase). Coseismic changes recorded for different
earthquakes at a sensitive site are usually similar, regardless of the earthquakes’ location and focal
mechanism. The sensitivity of a sensitive site may change with time. Also pre-earthquake changes were
observed hours to years before some destructive earthquakes at certain sensitive sites, some at large
epicentral distances, although these changes are relatively few and less certain. Both long-distance
coseismic and preseismic changes call for more realistic models than simple elastic dislocation for
explanation. Such models should take into consideration the heterogeneity of the crust where stress is
concentrated at certain weak points (sensitive sites) along active faults such that the stress condition is near
a critical level prior to the occurrence of the corresponding earthquakes. To explain the preseismic changes,
the models should also assume a broad-scaled episodically increasing strain field.