Locating Fully Locked Asperities Along the South America Subduction Megathrust: A New Physical Interseismic Inversion Approach in a Bayesian Framework

被引:20
作者
Herman, M. W. [1 ]
Govers, R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Utrecht, Dept Earth Sci, Utrecht, Netherlands
关键词
Inter-seismic Locking; Subduction Zone; Megathrust Earthquake; Slip Inversion; Tsunami; CREEPING SUBDUCTION; CRUSTAL DEFORMATION; STRAIN ACCUMULATION; EARTHQUAKE CYCLE; STRESS SHADOWS; HAYWARD FAULT; UPDIP LIMIT; SEISMIC GAP; CHILE; SLIP;
D O I
10.1029/2020GC009063
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
The largest earthquakes in subduction zones occur where significant interseismic slip deficit has accumulated on the plate interface. Slip deficit accumulates most quickly in mechanically locked regions, and these also cause the regions around them to accumulate slip deficit; therefore, large earthquakes are typically expected to rupture in and around locked areas. The locations and dimensions of these locked zones have been difficult to resolve using standard techniques and available data sets. We develop a new statistical interseismic inversion approach that incorporates the physical interactions between nearby fault areas to directly determine the distribution of locking on the subduction plate interface (simultaneously with rigid forearc motions) from interseismic surface velocities. Because we include physical prior information in the inversion procedure, this approach reduces uncertainties in the rate of slip deficit accumulation, even in locations (such as near the trench) where kinematic inversions of onshore data have relatively low resolution. Applying the inversion to the South America subduction zone, we find that the pattern of locking and corresponding slip deficit rates correlate well with recent and historical large earthquake ruptures. Locked patch dimensions are <40 km and account for no more than 30% of the area of the plate interface. The small size of the imaged locked zones is a natural outcome of our physical assumptions and implies that mechanical locking is caused by correspondingly small geological features. Despite their small dimensions, locked zones generate substantial slip deficit on the surrounding plate interface, consistent with the slip patterns of large megathrust earthquakes.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 74 条
[1]   Can the Updip Limit of Frictional Locking on Megathrusts Be Detected Geodetically? Quantifying the Effect of Stress Shadows on Near-Trench Coupling [J].
Almeida, Rafael ;
Lindsey, Eric O. ;
Bradley, Kyle ;
Hubbard, Judith ;
Mallick, Rishav ;
Hill, Emma M. .
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2018, 45 (10) :4754-4763
[2]   Partitioning of oblique convergence in the Northern Andes subduction zone: Migration history and the present-day boundary of the North Andean Sliver in Ecuador [J].
Alvarado, A. ;
Audin, L. ;
Nocquet, J. M. ;
Jaillard, E. ;
Mothes, P. ;
Jarrin, P. ;
Segovia, M. ;
Rolandone, F. ;
Cisneros, D. .
TECTONICS, 2016, 35 (05) :1048-1065
[3]   The angular velocities of the plates and the velocity of Earth's centre from space geodesy [J].
Argus, Donald F. ;
Gordon, Richard G. ;
Heflin, Michael B. ;
Ma, Chopo ;
Eanes, Richard J. ;
Willis, Pascal ;
Peltier, W. Richard ;
Owen, Susan E. .
GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL, 2010, 180 (03) :913-960
[4]   Inversion of Surface Deformation Data for Rapid Estimates of Source Parameters and Uncertainties: A Bayesian Approach [J].
Bagnardi, Marco ;
Hooper, Andrew .
GEOCHEMISTRY GEOPHYSICS GEOSYSTEMS, 2018, 19 (07) :2194-2211
[5]  
Béjar-Pizarro M, 2013, NAT GEOSCI, V6, P462, DOI [10.1038/ngeo1802, 10.1038/NGEO1802]
[6]  
Bevis M, 2001, GEOCHEM GEOPHY GEOSY, V2
[7]   Mega-earthquakes rupture flat megathrusts [J].
Bletery, Quentin ;
Thomas, Amanda M. ;
Rempel, Alan W. ;
Karlstrom, Leif ;
Sladen, Anthony ;
De Barros, Louis .
SCIENCE, 2016, 354 (6315) :1027-1031
[8]   MIDAS robust trend estimator for accurate GPS station velocities without step detection [J].
Blewitt, Geoffrey ;
Kreemer, Corne ;
Hammond, William C. ;
Gazeaux, Julien .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH, 2016, 121 (03) :2054-2068
[9]   Crustal motion in the Southern Andes (26°-36°S):: Do the Andes behave like a microplate? -: art. no. 1085 [J].
Brooks, BA ;
Bevis, M ;
Smalley, R ;
Kendrick, E ;
Manceda, R ;
Lauría, E ;
Maturana, R ;
Araujo, M .
GEOCHEMISTRY GEOPHYSICS GEOSYSTEMS, 2003, 4
[10]  
Brooks BA, 2011, NAT GEOSCI, V4, P380, DOI [10.1038/ngeo1143, 10.1038/NGEO1143]