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Fault parameters and tsunami excitation of the May 13, 1993, Shumagin Islands earthquake
Author(s) -
Tanioka Yuichiro,
Satake Kenji,
Ruff Larry,
González Frank
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
geophysical research letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.007
H-Index - 273
eISSN - 1944-8007
pISSN - 0094-8276
DOI - 10.1029/94gl00875
Subject(s) - seismology , geology , moment magnitude scale , seismic moment , focal mechanism , tsunami earthquake , moment tensor , subduction , trench , tide gauge , seismic gap , magnitude (astronomy) , amplitude , thrust fault , fault (geology) , geodesy , tectonics , geometry , sea level , physics , deformation (meteorology) , oceanography , chemistry , mathematics , scaling , organic chemistry , layer (electronics) , quantum mechanics , astronomy
The Shumagin Islands earthquake of May 13, 1993, occurred in a previously identified seismic gap where a large subduction earthquake is expected. We analyzed long‐period surface waves and P waves recorded on the IRIS stations to estimate the fault parameters. The Centroid Moment Tensor solution shows that the focal mechanism is a thrust type with the strike parallel to the Aleutian trench. The seismic moment is 2.0×10 19 Nm and the corresponding moment magnitude is 6.8. The Moment Tensor Rate Function inversion from P waves also yields a similar focal mechanism and seismic moment. In addition, this computation provides estimates of 10 s for the duration of the source time function and 35 km for the best point source depth. These seismological analyses indicate that the fault mechanism of the 1993 earthquake was as expected, but that the magnitude was too small to fill the gap. This earthquake did not generate a tsunami large enough to be observed at the Sand Point, Alaska tide gauge or at an ocean bottom pressure gauge, at distances of 100 and 300 km, respectively. Numerical tsunami simulations result in amplitudes at both stations that are within the background noise level. Additional numerical experiments also suggest that the small tsunami amplitudes are due to the location of the source area in the shallow shelf region.