The Global Importance of Continental Seismic Sequences

Author(s):  
Richard Walters ◽  
Tim Craig ◽  
Laura Gregory ◽  
Russell Azad Khan

<p>Large continental earthquakes necessarily involve cascading rupture of multiple faults or segments (e.g. El Mayor-Cucapah 2010). But these same critically-stressed systems sometimes rupture in drawn-out sequences of smaller earthquakes over days or years (e.g. Central Italy 2016), instead of in a single large event. Due to the similarity in the initial conditions of both scenarios, seismic sequences may be considered as ‘failed’ multi-segment earthquakes, whereby cascading rupture is prematurely halted before all available slip deficit is released.</p><p>These two modes of strain-release have vastly different implications for seismic hazard. Recent work on the 2016 Central Italy earthquake sequence, which is the first seismic sequence to be studied with modern high-quality geodetic and seismological datasets, showed that complexity in fault structure appeared to exercise a dual control on both the timing and sizes of events throughout this sequence. However, it is unclear if this structural control is common for all continental seismic sequences, how important seismic sequences are for the global seismic moment budget, and how this contribution to moment budget may vary between different tectonic regions.</p><p>Here we select shallow crustal continental earthquakes from the Global Centroid Moment Tensor catalog, and identify seismic sequences as agglomerates of clustered pairs of earthquakes where the summed moment (M<sub>0</sub>) of all aftershocks is greater than 50% of the M<sub>0</sub> of the first event in the sequence. We analyse the relative number of seismic sequences compared to other earthquakes for normal, reverse, and strike-slip faulting regions, and also calculate the relative M<sub>0</sub> release of seismic sequences and other earthquakes in these three regimes.</p><p>We find that although seismic sequences are equally common by number in all continental tectonic regimes, seismic sequences account for a much higher proportion of M<sub>0</sub> release for normal faults (~20%) than for reverse faults (~10%), with strike-slip faults intermediate between these two end-members. We also find that the proportion of M<sub>0</sub> release in seismic sequences is higher for events that occur in regions characterised by a diversity of different earthquake types (e.g. both reverse and strike-slip faulting) than for events that occur in regions characterised by a single earthquake type (e.g. strike-slip faulting only). Together these findings imply that complexity of fault network is an important factor in controlling the occurrence of large-M<sub>0</sub> seismic sequences, and that ‘failed’ multi-segment earthquakes and therefore large-M<sub>0</sub> seismic sequences are more likely to occur in regions with complex fault networks.</p>

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melissa O. Anderson ◽  
Chantal Norris-Julseth ◽  
Kenneth H. Rubin ◽  
Karsten Haase ◽  
Mark D. Hannington ◽  
...  

The transition from subduction to transform motion along horizontal terminations of trenches is associated with tearing of the subducting slab and strike-slip tectonics in the overriding plate. One prominent example is the northern Tonga subduction zone, where abundant strike-slip faulting in the NE Lau back-arc basin is associated with transform motion along the northern plate boundary and asymmetric slab rollback. Here, we address the fundamental question: how does this subduction-transform motion influence the structural and magmatic evolution of the back-arc region? To answer this, we undertake the first comprehensive study of the geology and geodynamics of this region through analyses of morphotectonics (remote-predictive geologic mapping) and fault kinematics interpreted from ship-based multibeam bathymetry and Centroid-Moment Tensor data. Our results highlight two notable features of the NE Lau Basin: 1) the occurrence of widely distributed off-axis volcanism, in contrast to typical ridge-centered back-arc volcanism, and 2) fault kinematics dominated by shallow-crustal strike slip-faulting (rather than normal faulting) extending over ∼120 km from the transform boundary. The orientations of these strike-slip faults are consistent with reactivation of earlier-formed normal faults in a sinistral megashear zone. Notably, two distinct sets of Riedel megashears are identified, indicating a recent counter-clockwise rotation of part of the stress field in the back-arc region closest to the arc. Importantly, the Riedel structures identified in this study directly control the development of complex volcanic-compositional provinces, which are characterized by variably-oriented spreading centers, off-axis volcanic ridges, extensive lava flows, and point-source rear-arc volcanoes. This study adds to our understanding of the geologic and structural evolution of modern backarc systems, including the association between subduction-transform motions and the siting and style of seafloor volcanism.


2016 ◽  
Vol 59 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Grazia Ciaccio

<p><em>This study presents a review of the instrumental seismicity of the Norcia-Amatrice area (central Italy) where a still on-going seismic sequence started on August 24th 2016 with a Mw6.0 earthquake.</em></p><p><em>The review is based on the analysis of the </em><em>seismic catalogs 1981-2016, the CMT (Centroid Moment Tensor) solutions and the TDMT (Time Domain Moment Tensor) solutions, dividing the area into three regions based on the main seismic sequences preceding the Amatrice 2016 mainshock.</em><em></em></p><p><em>The seismicity of this region is characterized by different types of activity: single events, minor sequences and swarms with hypocenters within the upper 15 km of the crust. </em><em>Small-magnitude seismic sequences on March 2007 with maximum Mw3.9, and one earthquake on March 2012, Mw37, not followed by significant seismicity, affected the area east of the Norcia, close to the Mw 5.4 aftershock of the Amatrice 2016 sequence. In the central area, near Accumoli, and in the southern sector close to Amatrice, minor seismic sequences occurred on February 2014 Ml3.5 and on November 2013 Mw3.7 respectively.</em><em></em></p><p><em>We integrated hypocentral locations and fault plane solutions to give a first look at the main features of the instrumental seismicity compared to the present seismic sequence in order to relate the seismicity patterns to seismogenic structures of this area of the central Italy.</em><em></em></p>


2016 ◽  
Vol 59 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Scognamiglio ◽  
Elisa Tinti ◽  
Matteo Quintiliani

<p>We present the revised Time Domain Moment Tensor (TDMT) catalogue for earthquakes with M_L larger than 3.6 of the first month of the ongoing Amatrice seismic sequence (August 24th - September 25th). Most of the retrieved focal mechanisms show NNW–SSE striking normal faults in agreement with the main NE-SW extensional deformation of Central Apennines. We also report a preliminary finite fault model analysis performed on the larger aftershock of this period of the sequence (M_w 5.4) and discuss the obtained results in the framework of aftershocks distribution.</p>


2020 ◽  
pp. 103-111
Author(s):  
Emad Abulrahman Mohammed Salih Al-Heety

Earthquakes occur on faults and create new faults. They also occur on  normal, reverse and strike-slip faults. The aim of this work is to suggest a new unified classification of Shallow depth earthquakes based on the faulting styles, and to characterize each class. The characterization criteria include the maximum magnitude, focal depth, b-constant value, return period and relations between magnitude, focal depth and dip of fault plane. Global Centroid Moment Tensor (GCMT) catalog is the source of the used data. This catalog covers the period from Jan.1976 to Dec. 2017. We selected only the shallow (depth less than 70kms) pure, normal, strike-slip and reverse earthquakes (magnitude ≥ 5) and excluded the oblique earthquakes. The majority of normal and strike-slip earthquakes occurred in the upper crust, while the reverse earthquakes occurred throughout the thickness of the crust. The main trend for the derived b-values for the three classes was: b normal fault>bstrike-slip fault>breverse fault.  The mean return period for the normal earthquake was longer than that of the strike-slip earthquakes, while the reverse earthquakes had the shortest period. The obtained results report the relationship between the magnitude and focal depth of the normal earthquakes. A negative significant correlation between the magnitude and dip class for the normal and reverse earthquakes is reported. Negative and positive correlation relations between the focal depth and dip class were recorded for normal and reverse earthquakes, respectively. The suggested classification of earthquakes provides significant information to understand seismicity, seismtectonics, and seismic hazard analysis.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Wiemer ◽  
Steffen G. Hagemann ◽  
Nicolas Thébaud ◽  
Carlos Villanes

Abstract New regional- to vein-scale geologic mapping and structural analysis of the Carboniferous Pataz gold vein system (~10 Moz Au) reveal critical insights into the structural control on gold mineralization along the Eastern Andean Cordillera of northern Peru. The Pataz basement comprises continental volcanic arc and marginal to marine sedimentary rocks, which experienced intensive D2 deformation associated with Late Famatinian northeast to southwest compressive fold-and-thrust belt development. The D2 event produced an E-NE–dipping structural grain, including (1) tilted and F2 folded S1 foliations, (2) local F2 axial planar S2 foliations, and (3) subparallel D2 thrust faults. Intrusions, constituting the ca. 342 to 332 Ma (Mississippian) Pataz batholith, were emplaced along strike of the prominent Río Marañón fault and inherited the D2 basement structures, as evident in the orientation of suprasolidus magmatic flow zones and intrusive contacts within the batholith. Progressive horst-and-graben development affecting the volcanic carapace of the Pataz batholith records late syn- to postmagmatic uplift and transition into a NW-SE–extensional regime. We show that the E-NE–dipping, batholith-hosted gold vein system formed through synchronous activation of two geometric fault-fill vein types, following (1) the moderately E-NE–dipping D2 basement-inherited competency contrasts within the batholith and (2) shallow NE-dipping Andersonian footwall thrusts, during NE-directed shortening (D3a). Both geometric vein types display an early paragenetic stage (I) of quartz-pyrite, progressing texturally from hydraulic breccia into crack-seal laminated shear veins. A second (II), undeformed quartz-pyrite-sphalerite-galena paragenetic stage is observed to fill previously established dilational sites adjacent to newly formed D3b normal faults, which likely formed during regional NW-SE–extensional horst-graben development. Kinematics and relative timing indicate that, upon batholith solidification, D3a transpressional dextral strike-slip ruptures along the Río Marañón fault superimposed a lower-order Riedel-type fault system. Fluid-assisted fault activation preferentially impinged on the D2 basement-inherited competency contrasts within the batholith. Subsequent transition into a transtensional regime led to the D3b normal faulting, providing a feeder system for stage II fluid influx. The tectonic switch may be explained either by increasing tensile strain accommodation upon progressive strike-slip movement within a regional dilational jog or by larger-scale crustal relaxation of the late Gondwana margin upon final Pangea assembly. Our new structural model for the Pataz vein system evolution highlights the importance of basement structural inheritance in controlling the localization of gold mineralization along polycyclic supercontinent margins. We provide valuable insights for exploration targeting of complex vein arrays within rheologically heterogeneous host rocks.


2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irwan Setyowidodo, Bagus Jaya Santosa

Penelitian ini melakukan analisis inversi waveform 3 komponen terhadap data gempa bumi yang  terjadi  di  Manokwari  Papua  pada  tanggal  3  Januari  2009  pukul  19:43:55  GMT  dengan magnitude  7.1  Mw  yang  episentrumnya  berada  pada  lattitude  -0.70541,  longitude  125.8455  dan kedalaman 25 km. Data yang digunakan dalam penelitian ialah, data seismik lokal yang diunduh dari data  gempa  IA.  Selanjutnya  dilakukan  proses   inversi  data  waveform  tiga  komponen  dengan menggunakan  metode  iterasi  dekonvolusi.  Metode  ini  diimplementasikan  dalam  software  ISOLA yang  dikembangkan   untuk  mendapatkan  parameter-parameter  sumber  gempa  bumi.  Parameter- parameter  gempa ini tergambarkan dalam Centroid Moment Tensor dan parameter sesar penyebab gempa. Selanjutnya, hasil parameter-patameter  tersebut digunakan untuk  mengetahui arah  patahan yang sebenarnya (fault-plane) dengan menggunakan metode H-C. Seismogram sintetik dihitung dengan ISOLA yang inputnya adalah model bumi dan data seismogram yang  direkam  oleh  stasiun  seismologi  BAK,  LBM  dan  JAY.  Hasil   interpretasi  atas  analisis seismogram   waveform   tiga   komponen   menunjukkan   bahwa   orientasi   bidang   patahan   gempa Manokwari Papua pada tanggal 3 Januari 2009 memiliki sudut dip 54o       terhadap bidang  horizontal yang menyebabkan zona patahan di daerah tersebut mudah bergeser dan mudah terjadi gempa. Hasil analisis  ini  diketahui  bahwa  sesar  penyebab  gempa  bumi  ini  ialah  sesar  strike-slip  oblique  yang bergerak dari  arah barat  laut - tenggara. Sumber  gempa  bumi  yang terjadi tersebut terjadi akibat aktivitas Sesar Sorong yang terdapat di bagian utara Manokwari.<br /><br /><br /><br />


2021 ◽  
Vol 54 (1D) ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Emad Al-Heety

The earthquake size distribution (b-value) is a significant factor to recognize the seismic activity, seismotectonic, and seismic hazard assessment. In the current work, the connection of the b-constant value with the focal depth and mechanism was studied. The effect of the study scale (global, regional and local) on the dependence of b-value on the focal mechanisms was investigated. The database is quoted from the Global Centroid Moment Tensor catalog. The selected earthquakes are the shallow normal, reverse and strike-slip events. The completeness magnitude (Mc) is 5.3. The maximum likelihood method is utilized to compute the b-value. The obtained results show that the b-value is decreasing with depth to range 10-20 km, then increases to the depth of 40km. The turning point of b-value (increasing of b-value) locates at the depth of the transition brittle-ductile zone. Globally and regionally, low, moderate, and high b-values are associated with reverse, strike-slip, and normal focal mechanisms, respectively, while locally, the relation between b-values and focal mechanisms shows different association trends, such as low, moderate, and high b-values are associated with normal, strike-slip, and reverse focal mechanisms and so on.


2021 ◽  
Vol 873 (1) ◽  
pp. 012022
Author(s):  
A W Baskara ◽  
D P Sahara ◽  
A D Nugraha ◽  
A Muhari ◽  
A A Rusdin ◽  
...  

Abstract The Ambon Mw 6.5 earthquake on September 26th, 2019, had contributed to give severe damages and significantly increased seismicity around Ambon Island and surrounding areas. Mainshock was followed by aftershocks with spatial distribution added to the impact of destructions in this region. We investigated aftershocks sequences to reveal the effect of mainshock toward the change in the in-situ stress field, including the possibility of the existing faults reactivation and the generation of aftershocks. We inferred centroid moment tensor (CMT) for significant aftershock events with Mw more than 4.0 using waveform data recorded from October 18th to December 15th, 2019. The aftershock focal mechanism was determined using the Bayesian full-waveform inversion code ISOLA-Obspy. This approach provides the uncertainty of the CMT model parameters. From ten CMT solution we had inferred in three seismic clusters, we found that majority of events have a strike-slip mechanism. Four events located on the south of the N-S trendings have a dextral strike-slip fault type, reflected the rupture of the mainshocks fault plane. Three events in the cluster of Ambon Island are dextral strike-slip, confirming the presence of the fault reactivation. Meanwhile, three CMT solutions in the north show the dextral strike-slip faulting and may belong to the mainshock main fault, connected with the cluster in the south.


2012 ◽  
Vol 55 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Giusy Lavecchia ◽  
Rita de Nardis ◽  
Daniele Cirillo ◽  
Francesco Brozzetti ◽  
Paolo Boncio

The Ferrara 2012 seismic sequence was characterized by two main compressional events, which occurred on May 20 and 29, 2012, with Mw 6.1 and Mw 6.0, respectively (quick Regional Centroid Moment Tensor [RCMT] at http://autorcmt.bo.ingv.it/quicks.html). These events were followed by five events with Mw &gt;5.0 (two on May 20 and three on May 29, 2012) and by hundreds of events of lower magnitudes distributed along a WNW-ESE-elongated area of ca. 500 km2 (ISIDe database at http://iside.rm.ingv.it/ iside/standard/index.jsp.). The ongoing activity of the northward-verging fold-and-thrust structures of the Ferrara-Romagna Arc (Figure 1A) and the eastward-verging Coastal Adriatic Arc (referred to as the Outer Thrust System [OTS] in Lavecchia et al. 2003) has been a debated topic in the Italian literature. […]


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