Items in cart [0]
Questions? Call 888-624-8373
PAPERBACK
list:$
32.50
Web:$29.25
add to cart
Rights & Permissions
Free Resources
PDF FORMAT
Display this book
on your site!
Related Titles
Living on an Active Earth: Perspectives on Earthquake Science
Improved Seismic Monitoring - Improved Decision-Making: Assessing the Value of Reduced Uncertainty
Other Related Titles
(NAS Colloquium) Earthquake Prediction: The Scientific Challenge
(1996)
National Academy of Sciences (
NAS
)
Web Search Builder
Use this book's key terms to search within this book, across our collection, or across the Web.
Skim This Chapter
Skim this chapter and use this chapter's key terms to search within this book.
Reference Finder
Paste in your own text to find books that relate to your topic.
Page
8
E-mail
Facebook
Digg
Stumble
Twitter
More
Page
8
Front Matter (R1-R2)
Earthquake prediction: The scientific challenge (3719-3720)
Earthquake prediction: The interaction of public policy and science (3721-3725)
Initiation process of earthquakes and its implications for seismic hazard reduction strategy (3726-3731)
Intermediate- and long-term earthquake prediction (3732-3739)
Scale dependence in earthquake phenomena and its relevance to earthquake prediction (3740-3747)
Intermediate-term earthquake prediction (3748-3755)
A selective phenomenology of the seismicity of Southern California (3756-3763)
The repetition of large-earthquake ruptures (3764-3771)
Hypothesis testing and earthquake prediction (3772-3775)
What electrical measurements can say about changes in fault systems (3776-3780)
Geochemical challenge to earthquake prediction (3781-3786)
Implications of fault constitutive properties for earthquake prediction (3787-3794)
Nonuniformity of the constitutive law parameters for shear rupture and quasistatic nucleation to dynamic rupture: A physical model of earthquake generation processes (3795-3802)
Rock friction and its implications for earthquake prediction examined via models of Parkfield earthquakes (3803-3810)
Slip complexity in earthquake fault models (3811-3818)
Dynamic friction and the origin of the complexity of earthquake sources (3819-3824)
Slip complexity in dynamic models of earthquake faults (3825-3829)
The organization of seismicity on fault networks (3830-3837)
Geometric incompatibility in a fault system (3838-3842)
Copyright © 2009. National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Terms of Use and Privacy Statement