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We report moment distribution results from a laboratory earthquake fault experiment consisting of sheared elastic plates separated by a narrow gap filled with a two dimensional granular medium. Local measurement of strain displacements of the plates at over 800 spatial points located adjacent to the gap allows direct determination of the moments and their spatial and temporal distributions. We show that events consist of localized, larger brittle motions and spatially-extended, smaller non-brittle events. The non-brittle events have a probability distribution of event moment consistent with an $M^{-3/2}$ power law scaling. Brittle events have a broad, peaked moment distribution and a mean repetition time. As the applied normal force increases, there are more brittle events, and the brittle moment distribution broadens. Our results are consistent with mean field descriptions of statistical models of earthquakes and avalanches.
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