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This study critically examines the use of geodetic strain rates for forecasting long-term earthquake rates in a slow-deforming region such as Italy, challenging the prevailing assumption of their temporal stationarity in interseismic stages for seismic hazard analyses. Typically, earthquake-rate models derived from geodesy assume stationary interseismic loading rates, with stress rates in the upper crust proportional to geodetic strain rates, leading to earthquake rates directly proportional to these strain rate tensors. However, our analysis unveils a pronounced correlation between the epicenters of earthquakes that occurred in the past 60-120 years and areas forecasted for higher future earthquake rates based on geodetic strain rates. This correlation appears weak and scattered in analyses of even older earthquakes. To corroborate our findings, we select the 2009 L'Aquila earthquake (m
Carafa et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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