Skip Nav Destination
Close
Article navigation
Research Article|
January 17, 2018
Do Large (Magnitude ≥8) Global Earthquakes Occur on Preferred Days of the Calendar Year or Lunar Cycle?
Susan E. Hough
Susan E. Hough
a
U.S. Geological Survey, 525 South Wilson Avenue, Pasadena, California 91106 U.S.A., hough@usgs.gov
Search for other works by this author on:
Seismological Research Letters (2018) 89 (2A): 577–581.
Article history
first online:
17 Jan 2018
Citation
Susan E. Hough; Do Large (Magnitude ) Global Earthquakes Occur on Preferred Days of the Calendar Year or Lunar Cycle?. Seismological Research Letters 2018;; 89 (2A): 577–581. doi: https://doi.org/10.1785/0220170154
Download citation file:
Close
You could not be signed in. Please check your email address / username and password and try again.
Index Terms/Descriptors
Citing articles via
Related Articles
Statistical Analyses of Great Earthquake Recurrence along the Cascadia Subduction Zone
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
V – Goldschmidt Abstracts 2013
Mineralogical Magazine
Recurrence Time Distributions of Large Earthquakes in Eastern Iran
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
BC Hydro Ground Motion Prediction Equations for Subduction Earthquakes
Earthquake Spectra
O – Goldschmidt Abstracts 2013
Mineralogical Magazine
Recurrent Large Earthquakes in a Fault Region: What Can Be Inferred from Small and Intermediate Events?
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
Related Book Content
Advances in natural hazard science and assessment, 1963–2013
The Impact of the Geological Sciences on Society
The time scales of continental rifting: Implications for global processes
The Web of Geological Sciences: Advances, Impacts, and Interactions
Probing crustal thickness evolution and geodynamic processes in the past from magma records: An integrated approach
The Crust-Mantle and Lithosphere-Asthenosphere Boundaries: Insights from Xenoliths, Orogenic Deep Sections, and Geophysical Studies
Petroleum Geochemistry of the Cenomanian–Turonian Eagle Ford Oils of South Texas
The Eagle Ford Shale: A Renaissance in U.S. Oil Production
Testing a geographical information system for damage and evacuation assessment during an effusive volcanic crisis
Detecting, Modelling and Responding to Effusive Eruptions
Synergistic use of satellite thermal detection and science: a decadal perspective using ASTER
Detecting, Modelling and Responding to Effusive Eruptions