Article,

Seismicity and seismotectonics of Norway and nearby continental shelf areas

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Journal of Geophysical Research, 96 (B2): 2249--2265 (February 1991)
DOI: 10.1029/90JB02010

Abstract

The earthquake activity of Norway and nearby offshore areas is low to intermediate, with few events above magnitude 5. Recent significant improvements in instrumental coverage in parallel with a better utilization of older (including historical) data have shown that the seismicity in the south is predominantly confined to the coastal areas and to the Viking Graben, while from the northern North Sea to Svalbard the earthquakes in a broad sense follow the continental margin. Fifty-one focal mechanism solutions from these areas, about half of them new, reveal stress directions that clearly indicate a connection to the plate tectonic 'ridge push' force, at least for the areas at a minimum distance from the continental margin. Along the margin, stress directions also indicate a possible connection to postglacial uplift as well as to lithospheric loading effects. A dominance of normal faulting on the landward side and reverse faulting on the oceanic side agrees with this interpretation. On a regional level, the seismicity in these areas correlate quite well with geologic features such as grabens, fault zones, fault complexes, fracture zones, and the margin itself, indicating that these structures act in a general sense as weakness zones in the presence of a regionally more stable stress field. In the northern North Sea, however, an area with quite anomalous stress orientations, with strike-slip faulting, is found in a region transitional between normal and reverse faulting. Most of the earthquake foci are confined to the presumably brittle parts of the crust, but many events are also located quite close to, and on both sides of, the Moho discontinuity.

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