Abstract

The Bulletin of the International Seismological Centre (ISC) remains in demand for a wide range of geophysical studies. Users of the ISC Bulletin benefit from its long-term coverage, the most comprehensive set of measurements from the majority of permanent seismic stations and networks, and homogeneity of included parameters of earthquakes and other seismic events worldwide. Despite a reasonably conservative approach in preserving the operational procedures, changes are inevitable in order to achieve the best possible accuracy of published earthquake parameters. The last fundamental change in procedures has fully affected the data for years 2011 and beyond (Bondár and Storchak in Geophys J Int 186: 1220-1244, 2011). This is why it was decided to rebuild the earlier part (1964–2010) of the ISC Bulletin to achieve compatibility in earthquake hypocentres and magnitudes through its entire period. The first article on this project (Storchak et al. in Geosci Lett 4: 32, 2017) covered the period from 1964 to 1979, as it was publicly released. This article covers the remaining period from 1980 to 2010 with all seismic events re-processed and re-located in line with the modern ISC procedures, with ~ 489,000 new events, ~ 2600 new stations, ~15.5 million new seismic arrivals, and more robust and reliable mb and MS magnitude evaluations. We give statistics of departures in epicentre location and depth between the original and rebuilt ISC hypocentres. We also provide a summary for the entire rebuilt period (1964–2010). We give a brief account of events deleted from and added to the Bulletin, based on additional reports from permanent and temporary seismic deployments. We explain that newly re-computed (rebuilt) mb is on average larger that the original mb by 0.05 unit of magnitude. The rebuilt MS is only 0.01 unit larger that its predecessor. We announce that the entire reviewed part of the ISC Bulletin (1964–2017) is now based on the same velocity model, ak135, and the same earthquake location and magnitude computation procedures. Finally, we provide advice on how to obtain the original ISC Bulletin data, where necessary.

Highlights

  • The most important long-term mission of the International Seismological Centre (ISC) has always been the production of the global definitive earthquake Bulletin (International Seismological Centre 2020a) which to this day remains in high demand for a wide range of geophysical studies

  • The ISC Bulletin available from the ISC website today has been completely rebuilt for the 1964–2010 period (Fig. 16)

  • A considerable number of poorly constrained or phantom events has been removed from the ISC Bulletin;

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Summary

Introduction

The most important long-term mission of the International Seismological Centre (ISC) has always been the production of the global definitive earthquake Bulletin (International Seismological Centre 2020a) which to this day remains in high demand for a wide range of geophysical studies. As current data (hypocentre solutions, magnitudes, focal mechanisms, seismic phase arrival times, amplitudes and periods) from reporting agencies arrived (Willemann and Storchak 2001), they were integrated, re-assessed, reviewed and published to keep the Bulletin

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