Publication | Open Access
Earthquake and tsunami forecasts: Relation of slow slip events to subsequent earthquake rupture
140
Citations
58
References
2014
Year
EngineeringSubsequent Earthquake RuptureEarth ScienceGeophysicsRupture AreaTsunami ScienceEarthquake SourceSlow Slip EventsEarthquake ForecastingGeodesyTsunami ForecastsSeismic CycleGeographyEarthquake RuptureForecastingSeptember 2012TectonicsSeismologySeismic RuptureCivil EngineeringTsunami HydrodynamicsSeismic Hazard
The 5 September 2012 M(w) 7.6 earthquake on the Costa Rica subduction plate boundary followed a 62-y interseismic period. High-precision GPS recorded numerous slow slip events (SSEs) in the decade leading up to the earthquake, both up-dip and down-dip of seismic rupture. Deeper SSEs were larger than shallower ones and, if characteristic of the interseismic period, release most locking down-dip of the earthquake, limiting down-dip rupture and earthquake magnitude. Shallower SSEs were smaller, accounting for some but not all interseismic locking. One SSE occurred several months before the earthquake, but changes in Mohr-Coulomb failure stress were probably too small to trigger the earthquake. Because many SSEs have occurred without subsequent rupture, their individual predictive value is limited, but taken together they released a significant amount of accumulated interseismic strain before the earthquake, effectively defining the area of subsequent seismic rupture (rupture did not occur where slow slip was common). Because earthquake magnitude depends on rupture area, this has important implications for earthquake hazard assessment. Specifically, if this behavior is representative of future earthquake cycles and other subduction zones, it implies that monitoring SSEs, including shallow up-dip events that lie offshore, could lead to accurate forecasts of earthquake magnitude and tsunami potential.
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