Central Europe: Active or residual tectonic stresses Gerhard GreinerJ. Henning Illies OriginalPaper Pages: 11 - 26
A mechanism for strain relaxation of barre granite: Opening of microfractures Terry EngelderMarc L. SbarRobert Kranz OriginalPaper Pages: 27 - 40
The relationship betweenin situ strain relaxation and outcrop fractures in the Potsdam Sandstone, Alexandria Bay, New York Terry EngelderMarc L. Sbar OriginalPaper Pages: 41 - 55
The stress state near Spanish Peaks, colorado determined from a dike pattern Otto H. MullerDavid D. Pollard OriginalPaper Pages: 69 - 86
Volcanoes as possible indicators of tectonic stress orientation — Aleutians and Alaska Kazuaki NakamuraKlaus H. JacobJohn N. Davies OriginalPaper Pages: 87 - 112
Stress and shear fracture (fault) patterns resulting from a suite of complicated boundary conditions with applications to the Wind River Mountains Gary Couples OriginalPaper Pages: 113 - 133
Preliminary stress measurements in central California using the hydraulic fracturing technique Mark D. ZobackJohn H. HealyJohn C. Roller OriginalPaper Pages: 135 - 152
Shear and tension hydraulic fractures in low permeability rocks P. SolbergD. LocknerJ. Byerlee OriginalPaper Pages: 191 - 198
Stress in the lithosphere: Inferences from steady state flow of rocks Jean-Claude C. MercierDouglas A. AndersonNeville L. Carter OriginalPaper Pages: 199 - 226
Theory and applicability of a recrystallized grain size paleopiezometer Robert J. Twiss OriginalPaper Pages: 227 - 244
State of stress in the lithosphere: Inferences from the flow laws of olivine Stephen H. Kirby OriginalPaper Pages: 245 - 258
On correlation between seismic velocity anisotropy and stressesin situ I. A. TurchaninovV. I. PaninG. A. Ivanov OriginalPaper Pages: 259 - 265
Simultaneous monitoring of stress and strain in massive rock Michael T. Gladwin OriginalPaper Pages: 267 - 274
Stress distribution near lake Jocassee, South Carolina Pradeep Talwani OriginalPaper Pages: 275 - 281
Focal mechanism of earthquakes in the Kamchatka-Commander region and heterogeneities of the active seismic zone Vyacheslav M. ZobinIrina A. Simbireva OriginalPaper Pages: 283 - 299
Implications of stress-drop models of earthquakes for the inversion of stress drop from seismic observations Raul Madariaga OriginalPaper Pages: 301 - 316
Apparent stress and stress drop for intraplate earthquakes and tectonic stress in the plates Randall M. RichardsonSean C. Solomon OriginalPaper Pages: 317 - 331
Source parameters for the January 1975 Brawley — Imperial valley earthquake swarm Stephen H. HartzellJames N. Brune OriginalPaper Pages: 333 - 355
Anomalous seismicity prior to rock bursts: Implications for earthquake prediction B. T. Brady OriginalPaper Pages: 357 - 374
Seismicity gap near Oaxaca, southern Mexico as a probable precursor to a large earthquake Masakazu OhtakeTosimatu MatumotoGary V. Latham OriginalPaper Pages: 375 - 385
Kinetic shear resistance, fluid pressures and radiation efficiency during seismic faulting Richard H. Sibson OriginalPaper Pages: 387 - 400
A viscoelastic relaxation model for post-seismic deformation from the San Francisco earthquake of 1906 John B. RundleDavid D. Jackson OriginalPaper Pages: 401 - 411
Stress accumulation and release on the San Andreas fault D. L. Turcotte OriginalPaper Pages: 413 - 427
Earthquake stress drops, ambient tectonic stresses and stresses that drive plate motions Thomas C. Hanks OriginalPaper Pages: 441 - 458