Gravity changes derived from regional gravity monitoring data in China from 1998 to 2005 exhibited noticeable variations before the occurrence of two large earthquakes in 2008 in China - the 2008 Yutian (Xinjiang) M s =7.3 earthquake and the 2008 Wenchuan (Sichuan) M s =8.0 earthquake. Based on these gravity variations, a group of researchers at the Second Crust Monitoring and Application Center of China Earthquake Administration made a suggestion in December of 2006 that the possibility for the Yutian (Xinjiang) and Wenchuan (Sichuan) areas to experience a large earthquake in either 2007 or 2008 was high. We review the gravity monitoring data and methods upon which the researchers reached these medium-term earthquake forecasts. Experience related to the medium-term forecasts of the Yutian and Wenchuan earthquakes suggests that gravity changes derived from regional gravity monitoring data could potentially be a useful medium-term precursor of large earthquakes, but significant additional research is needed to validate and evaluate this hypothesis. © 2012 Yiqing Zhu and F. Benjamin Zhan.
CITATION STYLE
Zhu, Y., & Zhan, F. B. (2012). Medium-term earthquake forecast using gravity monitoring data: Evidence from the yutian and wenchuan earthquakes in china. International Journal of Geophysics, 2012. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/307517
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