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Abstract
Earthquake occurrence is ultimately controlled by tectonic stress load. Nevertheless, the 2019, Mw = 4.9, Le Teil earthquake in southern France occurred in an area where strain rates are relatively low. Human operations can produce increases in stress load and degradation of strength on nearby active faults, which raises the potential for failure. Here we present estimates of the rupture geometry and source directivity of the Le Teil earthquake based on differential synthetic aperture radar interferometry and seismic data. We find that almost two centuries of mass removal at a nearby cement quarry likely provided the required stress change to hasten the occurrence of the Le Teil earthquake by more than 18,000 years. We suggest that further mass removal in the area might lead to even stronger earthquakes, by activating deeper sectors of the same fault plane.
The 2019 Le Teil earthquake in Southern France may have been triggered by the stress change from 180 years of mass removal at a nearby cement quarry, according to satellite-based observations and seismological analyses of the rupture parameters
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1 Istituto per il Rilevamento Elettromagnetico dell’Ambiente, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Napoli, Italy (GRID:grid.473657.4) (ISNI:0000 0000 8518 0610)
2 Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Osservatorio Vesuviano, Napoli, Italy (GRID:grid.410348.a) (ISNI:0000 0001 2300 5064)
3 Koronidos Str., Trikala, Greece (GRID:grid.410348.a)