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Article Dans Une Revue Science Année : 2006

Frictional afterslip following the 2005 Nias-Simeulue earthquake, Sumatra

Résumé

Continuously recording Global Positioning System stations near the 28 March 2005 rupture of the Sunda megathrust [moment magnitude (Mw) 8.7] show that the earthquake triggered aseismic frictional afterslip on the subduction megathrust, with a major fraction of this slip in the up-dip direction from the main rupture. Eleven months after the main shock, afterslip continues at rates several times the average interseismic rate, resulting in deformation equivalent to at least a Mw 8.2 earthquake. In general, along-strike variations in frictional behavior appear to persist over multiple earthquake cycles. Aftershocks cluster along the boundary between the region of coseismic slip and the up-dip creeping zone. We observe that the cumulative number of aftershocks increases linearly with postseismic displacements; this finding suggests that the temporal evolution of aftershocks is governed by afterslip.

Dates et versions

hal-00407597 , version 1 (27-07-2009)

Identifiants

Citer

Y.-J. Hsü, M. Simons, Jean-Philippe Avouac, J. Galetzka, K. Sieh, et al.. Frictional afterslip following the 2005 Nias-Simeulue earthquake, Sumatra. Science, 2006, 312 (5782), pp.1921-1926. ⟨10.1126/science.1126960⟩. ⟨hal-00407597⟩
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