Recent advances in characterizing the crustal stress field and future applications of stress data: Perspectives from North America

Geological Society, London, Special Publications
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Abstract

The stress field controls patterns of crustal deformation, including which faults are likeliest to cause earthquakes or transmit fluids. Since the 1950s, maps of maximum horizontal stress (SHmax) orientations have advanced dramatically, and the style of faulting (relative principal stress magnitudes) has recently been mapped in some regions as well. This perspectives paper summarizes developments in characterizing stress orientations and (relative) magnitudes, including new seismic and borehole methods, as well as progress in identifying the causes of stress variations. Despite these advances, adding far more spatiotemporal detail would allow geoscientists to address many of today's key challenges regarding natural hazards, energy development, and geodynamics. In particular, it is critically important to characterize stress heterogeneity at multiple scales while also recognizing the coherent variability of the stress field. The second part of the paper considers how more detailed stress datasets could prove essential to addressing some of the grand questions in geoscience, including deciphering the poorly understood feedbacks between crustal dynamics and surface processes, improving earthquake and eruption forecasts, and determining the origins and shared properties of plate boundaries.
Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Recent advances in characterizing the crustal stress field and future applications of stress data: Perspectives from North America
Series title Geological Society, London, Special Publications
DOI 10.1144/SP546-2023-195
Volume 546
Year Published 2024
Language English
Publisher The Geological Society of London
Contributing office(s) Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center
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