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A seismotectonic model for the 300-kilometer-long eastern Tennessee seismic zone

January 1, 1994

Ten years of monitoring microearthquakes with a regional seismic network has revealed the presence of a well-defined, linear zone of seismic activity in eastern Tennessee. This zone produced the second highest release of seismic strain energy in the United States east of the Rocky Mountains during the last decade, when normalized by crustal area. The data indicate that seismicity produced by regional, intraplate stresses is now concentrating near the boundary between relatively strong and weak basement crustal blocks.

Publication Year 1994
Title A seismotectonic model for the 300-kilometer-long eastern Tennessee seismic zone
Authors C.A. Powell, G. A. Bollinger, M.C. Chapman, M.S. Sibol, A. C. Johnston, R. L. Wheeler
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Science
Index ID 70017100
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse