TY - JOUR
T1 - The Nazca‐South America convergence rate and the recurrence of the Great 1960 Chilean Earthquake
AU - Stein, Seth
AU - Engeln, Joseph F.
AU - DeMets, Charles
AU - Gordon, Richard G.
AU - Woods, Dale
AU - Lundgren, Paul
AU - Argus, Don
AU - Stein, Carol
AU - Wiens, Douglas A.
PY - 1986/8
Y1 - 1986/8
N2 - The seismic slip rate along the Chile Trench estimated from the slip in the great 1960 earthquake and the recurrence history of major earthquakes has been interpreted as consistent with the subduction rate of the Nazca plate beneath South America. The convergence rate, estimated from global relative plate motion models, depends significantly on closure of the Nazca ‐ Antarctica ‐ South America circuit. NUVEL‐1, a new plate motion model which incorporates recently determined spreading rates on the Chile Rise, shows that the average convergence rate over the last three million years is slower than previously estimated. If this time‐averaged convergence rate provides an appropriate upper bound for the seismic slip rate, either the characteristic Chilean subduction earthquake is smaller than the 1960 event, the average recurrence interval is greater than observed in the last 400 years, or both. These observations bear out the nonuniformity of plate motions on various time scales, the variability in characteristic subduction zone earthquake size, and the limitations of recurrence time estimates.
AB - The seismic slip rate along the Chile Trench estimated from the slip in the great 1960 earthquake and the recurrence history of major earthquakes has been interpreted as consistent with the subduction rate of the Nazca plate beneath South America. The convergence rate, estimated from global relative plate motion models, depends significantly on closure of the Nazca ‐ Antarctica ‐ South America circuit. NUVEL‐1, a new plate motion model which incorporates recently determined spreading rates on the Chile Rise, shows that the average convergence rate over the last three million years is slower than previously estimated. If this time‐averaged convergence rate provides an appropriate upper bound for the seismic slip rate, either the characteristic Chilean subduction earthquake is smaller than the 1960 event, the average recurrence interval is greater than observed in the last 400 years, or both. These observations bear out the nonuniformity of plate motions on various time scales, the variability in characteristic subduction zone earthquake size, and the limitations of recurrence time estimates.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84989558382
U2 - 10.1029/GL013i008p00713
DO - 10.1029/GL013i008p00713
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84989558382
SN - 0094-8276
VL - 13
SP - 713
EP - 716
JO - Geophysical Research Letters
JF - Geophysical Research Letters
IS - 8
ER -