Macrofracturing of Oceanic Lithosphere in Complex Large Earthquake Sequences
- Creators
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Lay, Thorne
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Ye, Lingling
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Wu, Zhenbo
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Kanamori, Hiroo
Abstract
Major earthquakes in oceanic lithosphere seaward of the subduction zone outer trench slope are relatively uncommon, but several recent occurrences have involved very complex sequences rupturing multiple nonaligned faults and/or having high aftershock productivity with diffuse distribution. This includes the 21 December 2010 M_W 7.4 Ogasawara (Bonin), 11 April 2012 M_W 8.6 Indo‐Australia, 23 January 2018 M_W 7.9 Off‐Kodiak Island, and 20 December 2018 M_W 7.3 Nikol'skoye (northwest Pacific) earthquakes. Major oceanic intraplate event sequences farther from plate boundaries do not tend to be as complex in faulting or aftershocks. Outer trench slope extensional faulting can involve complex distributed sequences, particularly when activated by great megathrust ruptures such as 11 March 2011 M_W 9.1 Tohoku and 15 November 2006 M_W 8.3 Kuril Islands. Intense faulting sequences also occur near subduction zone corners, with many fault geometries being activated, including some in nearby oceanic lithosphere, as for the 29 September 2009 M_W 8.1 Samoa, 6 February 2013 M_W 8.0 Santa Cruz Islands, and 16 November 2000 M_W 8.0 New Ireland earthquakes. The laterally varying plate boundary stresses from heterogeneous locking, recent earthquakes, or boundary geometry influence the specific faulting geometries activated in nearby major intraplate ruptures in oceanic lithosphere. Preexisting lithospheric structures and fabrics exert secondary influences on the faulting. Intraplate stress release in oceanic lithosphere near subduction zones favors distributed macrofracturing of near‐critical fault systems rather than localized, single‐fault failures, both under transient loading induced by plate boundary ruptures and under slow loading by tectonic motions and slab pull.
Additional Information
© 2020 American Geophysical Union. Issue Online: 07 October 2020; Version of Record online: 07 October 2020; Accepted manuscript online: 09 September 2020; Manuscript accepted: 07 September 2020; Manuscript revised: 08 August 2020; Manuscript received: 05 May 2020. We thank Emily Brodsky for her thoughtful comments on the influence of plate boundary stress gradients. We appreciate helpful reviews from the JGR Editor R. Abercrombie, an anonymous reviewer, and C. Rollins. T. L.'s research on earthquakes is supported by U.S. National Science Foundation grant EAR1802364. L. Y.'s earthquake studies are supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (41874056) and Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities, Sun Yat‐sen University (19lgzd11). Z. W. received support from Chengdu University of Technology and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (41704042). Data Availability Statement: All broadband seismic waveforms used in this study were accessed from the Data Management Center of the Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology (https://www.iris.edu/hq/). Centroid moment‐tensor solutions were obtained from https://www.globalcmt.org/. Ocean bathymetry model ETOPO1 was obtained from NOAA (https://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/mgg/global/). The least squares inversion software is adapted from the package of Kikuchi and Kanamori (http://wwweic.eri.u-tokyo.ac.jp/ETAL/KIKUCHI/).Attached Files
Published - 2020JB020137.pdf
Supplemental Material - jgrb54430-sup-0001-2020jb020137-si.docx
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 105476
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20200922-134833603
- NSF
- EAR-1802364
- National Natural Science Foundation of China
- 41874056
- Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
- 19lgzd11
- Sun Yat-sen Univerity
- Chengdu University of Technology
- National Natural Science Foundation of China
- 41704042
- Created
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2020-09-22Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-16Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- Seismological Laboratory, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences (GPS)