DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4020-8222-1_9
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The Case for Large M > 7 Earthquakes Felt in the UK in Historical Times

Abstract: Evidence from seismic and bathymetric surveys along the passive margin of NW Europe indicates that there are a number of features suggestive of large earthquakes having occurred in geologically recent times, although the exact timing of these events is difficult to establish. It might be thought that, although such large earthquakes may have occurred, for example, in immediate postglacial times in response to rapid isostatic readjustment, no earthquake in the UK area in historical times has exceeded a value of… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
(37 reference statements)
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“…In Indonesia, the NOAA database lists only six earthquakes with M ≥ 7. Conversely, GHEC v1.0 contains 75 earthquakes, 70 of which were newly studied, although with preliminary parameters based on extremely simplified procedures (Musson 2012a), relying on Harris and Major (2012).…”
Section: The Global Historical Earthquake Catalogue (M ≥ 70 1000–1903)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Indonesia, the NOAA database lists only six earthquakes with M ≥ 7. Conversely, GHEC v1.0 contains 75 earthquakes, 70 of which were newly studied, although with preliminary parameters based on extremely simplified procedures (Musson 2012a), relying on Harris and Major (2012).…”
Section: The Global Historical Earthquake Catalogue (M ≥ 70 1000–1903)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is palaeoseismic evidence for large earthquakes on the continental slope north and west of the UK (Musson 2006), and ambiguous (and weak) evidence for an anomalously large event having occurred in historical times (Musson 2004b(Musson , 2006, analogous to the 1927 Grand Banks (Newfoundland) earthquake, which was a case of a large (>7 Mw) earthquake on a passive margin in an area otherwise aseismic.…”
Section: ) Offshore Seismicitymentioning
confidence: 99%