z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Noncharacteristic behavior and complex recurrence of large subduction zone earthquakes
Author(s) -
Schwartz Susan Y.
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: solid earth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/1999jb900226
Subject(s) - seismology , subduction , geology , seismic moment , slip (aerodynamics) , moment magnitude scale , spatial distribution , plate tectonics , earthquake swarm , aftershock , seismic gap , tectonics , fault (geology) , induced seismicity , geometry , physics , mathematics , remote sensing , scaling , thermodynamics
The last few years have been remarkable with respect to the number of large underthrusting earthquakes in subduction zones that reruptured plate boundary segments that failed in previous great events. Availability of modern seismic data for two consecutive large earthquakes rupturing the same portion of the plate interface provides the opportunity to compare the spatial distribution of moment release for both events. Such comparisons have been made for the plate boundary segments that failed in (1) the 1957 ( M w = 8.6), 1986 ( M w = 8.0), and 1996 ( M w = 7.9) Aleutian Islands earthquakes; (2) the 1963 ( M w = 8.5) and 1995 ( M w = 7.9) Kuril Islands earthquakes; (3) the 1971 ( M w = 8.0) and 1995 ( M w = 7.7) Solomon Islands earthquakes; and (4) the 1968 ( M w = 8.2) and 1994 ( M w = 7.7) northern Honshu earthquakes. The spatial distribution of moment release for all four of the initial great earthquakes and two of the repeat events has been determined in previous studies. Here, slip distributions for the three most recent events are determined from inversion of source time functions, derived by empirical Greens function analysis of long‐period surface waves and broadband body waves. Comparisons of the spatial distribution of moment release for sequential earthquake ruptures reveal considerable differences in the pattern of recurrent fault slip. The 1994 northern Honshu and 1995 Solomon Islands earthquakes primarily fill in areas of slip deficit left by their preceding events rather than rerupture identical asperities. The 1995 Kuril Islands and the 1996 Aleutian Islands earthquakes both rerupture portions of an asperity distribution defined by preceding events but with variable amounts of slip. This study provides the first direct evidence that recurrence of large circum‐Pacific plate boundary events is more complex than repeat rupture of dominant asperities. Recurrent fault slip for the four plate boundary segments studied does not support characteristic slip models either where failure on an entire fault segment occurs repeatedly in events with nearly identical rupture lengths, locations, and slip magnitudes or where failure of individual asperities occurs with identical slip functions through consecutive earthquake cycles. These sequential slip patterns are not consistent with physical models of earthquake rupture where slip complexity is exclusively controlled by invariant geometric and/or material heterogeneity but suggest that dynamic considerations are also important.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here