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Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; October 2009; v. 99; no. 5; p. 2815-2824; DOI: 10.1785/0120080336
© 2009 Seismological Society of America
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Broadband Records of Earthquakes in Deep Gold Mines and a Comparison with Results from SAFOD, California

A. McGarr, M. Boettcher, J. B. Fletcher, R. Sell, and M. J. S. Johnston

U.S. Geological Survey, MS 977 345 Middlefield Rd., Menlo Park, California 94025 mcgarr{at}usgs.gov

R. Durrheim, S. Spottiswoode, and A. Milev

Council for Scientific and Industrial Research Natural Resources and Environmental Unit, P.O. Box 91230, Auckland Park 2006, South Africa

For one week during September 2007, we deployed a temporary network of field recorders and accelerometers at four sites within two deep, seismically active mines. The ground-motion data, recorded at 200 samples/sec, are well suited to determining source and ground-motion parameters for the mining-induced earthquakes within and adjacent to our network. Four earthquakes with magnitudes close to 2 were recorded with high signal/noise at all four sites. Analysis of seismic moments and peak velocities, in conjunction with the results of laboratory stick-slip friction experiments, were used to estimate source processes that are key to understanding source physics and to assessing underground seismic hazard. The maximum displacements on the rupture surfaces can be estimated from the parameter Formula , where Formula is the peak ground velocity at a given recording site, and R is the hypocentral distance. For each earthquake, the maximum slip and seismic moment can be combined with results from laboratory friction experiments to estimate the maximum slip rate within the rupture zone. Analysis of the four M 2 earthquakes recorded during our deployment and one of special interest recorded by the in-mine seismic network in 2004 revealed maximum slips ranging from 4 to 27 mm and maximum slip rates from 1.1 to 6.3 m/sec. Applying the same analyses to an M 2.1 earthquake within a cluster of repeating earthquakes near the San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth site, California, yielded similar results for maximum slip and slip rate, 14 mm and 4.0 m/sec.







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