TY - JOUR
T1 - The largest recorded earthquake swarm
T2 - intraplate faulting near the Southwest Indian Ridge
AU - Wiens, D. A.
AU - Petroy, D. E.
PY - 1990
Y1 - 1990
N2 - A remarkable swarm of 48 earthquakes was recorded from 1925 to 1933, which included 29 events with M ≥ 6.0 and 4 events with M = 7.0. Relocated events cluster around 33.8°S, 58.0°E, approximately 100 km east of the southern intersection of the Atlantis II Transform and the spreading ridge, and epicentral uncertainties derived from both standard least squares and resampling techniques preclude locations along the plate boundary. Multiple event relocation shows that seven 1977-1983 events (mb 5.1-5.6) are distributed across a 40-km-diameter region at the location of the 1925-1933 swarm events. Mechanisms determined for three of the recent events using waveform inversion indicate normal faulting with variable strike-slip components at depths of 12-17 km; neither the nodal planes nor the tensional axes show consistency between the three mechanisms. Grid search fits to body waveforms from the larger 1925-1933 swarm earthquakes suggest normal faulting mechanisms similar to the recent events, with depths of 11-20 km and seismic moments ranging up to 1.8 × 1027 dyn cm. The earthquake depths and tensional mechanisms are consistent with release of thermoelastic stress, which may be enhanced at this location by thermal bending moments associated with the transform fault. The total moment release of the 1925-1933 swarm suggests that intraplate stress release is dominated by infrequent but highly energetic episodes of seismicity and that estimates of intraplate moment release taken from observations over a limited time period underestimate intraplate seismicity levels. -from Authors
AB - A remarkable swarm of 48 earthquakes was recorded from 1925 to 1933, which included 29 events with M ≥ 6.0 and 4 events with M = 7.0. Relocated events cluster around 33.8°S, 58.0°E, approximately 100 km east of the southern intersection of the Atlantis II Transform and the spreading ridge, and epicentral uncertainties derived from both standard least squares and resampling techniques preclude locations along the plate boundary. Multiple event relocation shows that seven 1977-1983 events (mb 5.1-5.6) are distributed across a 40-km-diameter region at the location of the 1925-1933 swarm events. Mechanisms determined for three of the recent events using waveform inversion indicate normal faulting with variable strike-slip components at depths of 12-17 km; neither the nodal planes nor the tensional axes show consistency between the three mechanisms. Grid search fits to body waveforms from the larger 1925-1933 swarm earthquakes suggest normal faulting mechanisms similar to the recent events, with depths of 11-20 km and seismic moments ranging up to 1.8 × 1027 dyn cm. The earthquake depths and tensional mechanisms are consistent with release of thermoelastic stress, which may be enhanced at this location by thermal bending moments associated with the transform fault. The total moment release of the 1925-1933 swarm suggests that intraplate stress release is dominated by infrequent but highly energetic episodes of seismicity and that estimates of intraplate moment release taken from observations over a limited time period underestimate intraplate seismicity levels. -from Authors
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0025229467&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1029/JB095iB04p04735
DO - 10.1029/JB095iB04p04735
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0025229467
SN - 0148-0227
VL - 95
SP - 4735
EP - 4750
JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
IS - B4
ER -