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Doublet earthquakesTypes of earthquake

Doublet earthquake

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Doublet earthquake

In seismology, doublet earthquakes—also called multiple or twin earthquakes—are groups of earthquakes that have very similar waveforms and happen in the same location. They are sequences with two or more main shocks that are almost the same in strength. Sometimes these shocks happen just seconds apart, and sometimes they happen years later. These earthquakes are special because their strengths are almost the same, unlike regular aftershocks, which are smaller and happen after the main quake.

Doublet earthquakes share almost identical seismic waveforms because they come from the same rupture zone. They happen when parts of a fault, called asperities, stop the main earthquake from moving smoothly. This means only part of the pressure built up by tectonic stress is released, and the rest can cause another quake soon after. For example, in the 1997 Harnai earthquake, a big quake was followed by another big one just 19 seconds later.

Scientists did not fully understand doublet earthquakes until the 1970s and 1980s. They studied seismograms and realized some big earthquakes were not just large foreshocks or aftershocks. These earthquakes challenge older ideas about how to predict seismic hazard, because they can involve more than one part of a fault breaking at the same time.

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Doublet earthquake, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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