Publication | Open Access
Slow rupture in Andaman during 2004 Sumatra-Andaman earthquake: a probable consequence of subduction of 90°E ridge
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Citations
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References
2010
Year
EngineeringSumatra-andaman EarthquakeEarthquake HazardsActive TectonicsEarth ScienceGeophysicsEarthquake SourceGravity AnomaliesRegional TectonicsGeodesyNeotectonicsSlow Rupture SpeedGeographySeismic ImagingEarthquake RuptureTectonicsSeismologyProbable ConsequenceSubduction ZoneSlow RuptureRupture Characteristics
One of the most enigmatic features of the 2004 Sumatra–Andaman earthquake was the slow rupture speed and low slip on the northern part of the rupture under the Andaman region. We propose that the aseismic 90°E Ridge (NER) on the Indian Plate obliquely subducts under the Andaman frontal arc region. Though other possibilities also exist, we hypothesized that this ridge probably acted as a structural barrier influencing rupture characteristics of the earthquake. Here we present several features of the Andaman region that favour NER subduction under the region, which include (i) comparatively shallow bathymetry and trench depth, (ii) low seismicity, (iii) significant variation in the azimuths of coseismic horizontal offsets due to the 2004 Sumatra–Andaman earthquake, (iv) lack of post-seismic afterslip on the coseismic rupture in the Andaman frontal arc region, (v) low P wave with only small decrease in S wave speed from tomographic studies, (vi) gravity anomalies on the Indian Plate indicating continuation of the ridge under the Andaman frontal arc and (vii) lack of back arc volcanoes in the Andaman region.
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