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Wetmiller, R. J., Cajka, M. G. (1989) Tectonic implications of seismic activity recorded by the northern Ontario seismograph network. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 26 (2) 376-386 doi:10.1139/e89-035

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleTectonic implications of seismic activity recorded by the northern Ontario seismograph network
JournalCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences
AuthorsWetmiller, R. J.Author
Cajka, M. G.Author
Year1989 (February 1)Volume26
Issue2
PublisherCanadian Science Publishing
DOIdoi:10.1139/e89-035Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID480389Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:480389:2
GUID0
Full ReferenceWetmiller, R. J., Cajka, M. G. (1989) Tectonic implications of seismic activity recorded by the northern Ontario seismograph network. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 26 (2) 376-386 doi:10.1139/e89-035
Plain TextWetmiller, R. J., Cajka, M. G. (1989) Tectonic implications of seismic activity recorded by the northern Ontario seismograph network. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 26 (2) 376-386 doi:10.1139/e89-035
In(1989, February) Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences Vol. 26 (2) Canadian Science Publishing
Abstract/Notes The northern Ontario seismograph network, which has operated under the Canadian Nuclear Fuel Waste Management Program since 1982, has provided valuable data to supplement those recorded by the Canadian national networks on earthquake activity, rockburst activity, the distribution of regional seismic velocities, and the contemporary stress field in northern Ontario. The combined networks recorded the largest earthquake known in northwestern Ontario, M 3.9 near Sioux Lookout on February 11, 1984, and many smaller earthquakes in northeastern Ontario. Focal mechanism solutions of these and older events showed high horizontal stress and thrust faulting to be the dominant features of the contemporary tectonics of northern Ontario. The zone of more intense earthquake activity in western Quebec appeared to extend northwestward into the Kapuskasing area of northeastern Ontario, where an area of persistent microearthquake activity had been identified by a seismograph station near Kapuskasing.Controlled explosions of the 1984 Kapuskasing Uplift seismic profile experiment recorded on the northern Ontario seismograph network showed the presence of anomalously high LG velocities in northeastern Ontario (3.65 km/s) that when properly taken into account reduced the mislocation errors of well-recorded seismic events by 50% on average.


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