A regional time and magnitude predictable model has been applied to estimate the recurrence intervals for large earthquakes in the vicinity of 8 October 2005 Kashmir Himalaya earthquake (25°-40°N and 65°-85°E), which includes India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Hindukush, Pamirs, Mangolia and Tien-Shan. This region has been divided into 17 seismogenic sources on the basis of certain seismotectonics and geomorphological criteria. A complete earthquake catalogue (historical and instrumental) of magnitude Ms â 5.5 during the period 1853-2005 has been used in the analysis. According to this model, the magnitude of preceding earthquake governs the time of occurrence and magnitude of future mainshock in the sequence. The interevent time between suc...
We examined the temporal seismicity varia-tion in the north-west Himalayas and the adja-cent regions...
The earthquake catalogue from 1964 to August 1991 is used to identify the times of increased probabi...
The return periods and occurrence probabilities related to medium and large earthquakes (M w 4.0-7.0...
Abstract. Northeast India and its vicinity is one of the seis-mically most active regions in the wor...
Kashmir region is one of the most seismic prone area lies on the Eurasian and Indian plate boundary....
Abstract—The Himalayan region is one of the most seismic prone areas of the world. The North-East (N...
The maximum likelihood estimation method is applied to study the geographical distribution of earthq...
This work concentrates on the distribution of earthquake interevent times in northwest Himalaya and ...
NortheastIndiaandadjoiningregions(20°-32 Nand 87°-100 E) are highly vulnerable to earthquake hazar...
A complete earthquake catalogue of the Western Himalaya (latitudes 30°N–36°N and longitudes 72°E–78°...
Gumbel's theory of extreme events has been applied to the prediction of earthquake recurrence r...
Based on active tectonics, structural orientation, focal mechanism of earthquakes and seismicity lev...
Seismicity of the Himalayan arc lying within the limits shown in figure 1 and covering the period 19...
A simplified form of the "regional time and magnitude predictable model" gives the time interval, T,...
The goal of this paper is to derive a hazard map for earthquake occurrences in Pakistan from a cata...
We examined the temporal seismicity varia-tion in the north-west Himalayas and the adja-cent regions...
The earthquake catalogue from 1964 to August 1991 is used to identify the times of increased probabi...
The return periods and occurrence probabilities related to medium and large earthquakes (M w 4.0-7.0...
Abstract. Northeast India and its vicinity is one of the seis-mically most active regions in the wor...
Kashmir region is one of the most seismic prone area lies on the Eurasian and Indian plate boundary....
Abstract—The Himalayan region is one of the most seismic prone areas of the world. The North-East (N...
The maximum likelihood estimation method is applied to study the geographical distribution of earthq...
This work concentrates on the distribution of earthquake interevent times in northwest Himalaya and ...
NortheastIndiaandadjoiningregions(20°-32 Nand 87°-100 E) are highly vulnerable to earthquake hazar...
A complete earthquake catalogue of the Western Himalaya (latitudes 30°N–36°N and longitudes 72°E–78°...
Gumbel's theory of extreme events has been applied to the prediction of earthquake recurrence r...
Based on active tectonics, structural orientation, focal mechanism of earthquakes and seismicity lev...
Seismicity of the Himalayan arc lying within the limits shown in figure 1 and covering the period 19...
A simplified form of the "regional time and magnitude predictable model" gives the time interval, T,...
The goal of this paper is to derive a hazard map for earthquake occurrences in Pakistan from a cata...
We examined the temporal seismicity varia-tion in the north-west Himalayas and the adja-cent regions...
The earthquake catalogue from 1964 to August 1991 is used to identify the times of increased probabi...
The return periods and occurrence probabilities related to medium and large earthquakes (M w 4.0-7.0...