Exploratory Statistical Analysis of Precursors to Moderate Earthquakes in Japan

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Abstract

Modern statistical techniques enable quantitative characterisation of seismic activity. Analysis of the 2011 Tohoku megathrust earthquake revealed clear precursory signals: shortened inter-event intervals, increased magnitude scale (σ), and a pronounced precursory swarm immediately before the mainshock. While unique to this magnitude 9 event, here I present subtler anomalies that may precede magnitude 7-class events, particularly when swarms occur. In such cases, magnitude distributions often differ from background seismicity, frequently showing elevated location (μ) and scale (σ). Conversely, σ is sometimes reduced, particularly in volcanic regions, where large earthquakes may occur without discernible swarms. Detection of swarm activity and analysis of magnitude parameters thus remain central to seismic risk assessment. If swarm characteristics resemble background levels, the likelihood of a major event is presumably low. However, the distinct, immediate precursory swarm observed before the Tohoku earthquake has not been replicated elsewhere. These findings indicate that statistical anomalies may signal elevated risk but are unlikely to enable precise temporal prediction of seismic events.

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