displaced this curb over 15 years (
Fremont, California).|125x125px Knowing how creep rates vary temporally and spatially along faults has important implications for predicting the timing, locations, and potential sizes of future
earthquakes as well as the mechanics of
fault behavior. Measurements of inter-seismic strain, as well as the associated pattern of
coupling, are also crucial because they reveal the pockets where stress is building up and may be released in future seismic ruptures. The emergence of space-based geodesy and newly developed
remote sensing techniques are used to monitor
crustal deformation in order to track aseismic creep on a
fault.
Theodolite surveys are used with alignment arrays to track the creep. These data may then be used to restrict a fault's seismic capacity. == Examples ==