Shallow seismicity, triggered seismicity, and ambient noise tomography at the long-dormant Uturuncu Volcano, Bolivia

被引:0
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作者
Jennifer A. Jay
Matthew E. Pritchard
Michael E. West
Douglas Christensen
Matthew Haney
Estela Minaya
Mayel Sunagua
Stephen R. McNutt
Mario Zabala
机构
[1] Cornell University,Department of Earth and Atmospheric Science
[2] University of Alaska Fairbanks,Geophysical Institute
[3] U.S. Geological Survey,Alaska Volcano Observatory
[4] Observatorio San Calixto,undefined
[5] SERGEOTECMIN,undefined
来源
Bulletin of Volcanology | 2012年 / 74卷
关键词
Seismology; Triggered earthquakes; Earthquake swarms; South America;
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摘要
Using a network of 15 seismometers around the inflating Uturuncu Volcano from April 2009 to 2010, we find an average rate of about three local volcano-tectonic earthquakes per day, and swarms of 5–60 events a few times per month with local magnitudes ranging from −1.2 to 3.7. The earthquake depths are near sea level, more than 10 km above the geodetically inferred inflation source and the Altiplano Puna Magma Body. The Mw 8.8 Maule earthquake on 27 February 2010 triggered hundreds of earthquakes at Uturuncu with the onset of the Love and Rayleigh waves and again with the passage of the X2/X3 overtone phases of Rayleigh waves. This is one of the first incidences in which triggering has been observed from multiple surface wave trains. The earthquakes are oriented NW–SE similar to the regional faults and lineaments. The b value of the catalog is 0.49, consistent with a tectonic origin of the earthquakes. We perform ambient noise tomography using Love wave cross-correlations to image a low-velocity zone at 1.9 to 3.9 km depth below the surface centered slightly north of the summit. The low velocities are perhaps related to the hydrothermal system and the low-velocity zone is spatially correlated with earthquake locations. The earthquake rate appears to vary with time—a seismic deployment from 1996 to 1997 reveals 1–5 earthquakes per day, whereas 60 events/day were seen during 5 days using one seismometer in 2003. However, differences in analysis methods and magnitudes of completeness do not allow direct comparison of these seismicity rates. The rate of seismic activity at Uturuncu is higher than at other well-monitored inflating volcanoes during periods of repose. The frequent swarms and triggered earthquakes suggest the hydrothermal system is metastable.
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页码:817 / 837
页数:20
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  • [1] Shallow seismicity, triggered seismicity, and ambient noise tomography at the long-dormant Uturuncu Volcano, Bolivia
    Jay, Jennifer A.
    Pritchard, Matthew E.
    West, Michael E.
    Christensen, Douglas
    Haney, Matthew
    Minaya, Estela
    Sunagua, Mayel
    McNutt, Stephen R.
    Zabala, Mario
    BULLETIN OF VOLCANOLOGY, 2012, 74 (04) : 817 - 837