| Literature DB >> 16094366 |
Honn Kao1, Shao-Ju Shan, Herb Dragert, Garry Rogers, John F Cassidy, Kumar Ramachandran.
Abstract
The Cascadia subduction zone is thought to be capable of generating major earthquakes with moment magnitude as large as M(w) = 9 at an interval of several hundred years. The seismogenic portion of the plate interface is mostly offshore and is currently locked, as inferred from geodetic data. However, episodic surface displacements-in the direction opposite to the long-term deformation motions caused by relative plate convergence across a locked interface-are observed about every 14 months with an unusual tremor-like seismic signature. Here we show that these tremors are distributed over a depth range exceeding 40 km within a limited horizontal band. Many occurred within or close to the strong seismic reflectors above the plate interface where local earthquakes are absent, suggesting that the seismogenic process for tremors is fluid-related. The observed depth range implies that tremors could be associated with the variation of stress field induced by a transient slip along the deeper portion of the Cascadia interface or, alternatively, that episodic slip is more diffuse than originally suggested.Entities:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16094366 DOI: 10.1038/nature03903
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962