scholarly journals Performance Evaluation of Different SAR-Based Techniques on the 2019 Ridgecrest Sequence

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 685
Author(s):  
Marco Polcari ◽  
Mimmo Palano ◽  
Marco Moro

We evaluated the performances of different SAR-based techniques by analyzing the surface coseismic displacement related to the 2019 Ridgecrest seismic sequence (an Mw 6.4 foreshock on July 4th and an Mw 7.1 mainshock on July 6th) in the tectonic framework of the eastern California shear zone (Southern California, USA). To this end, we compared and validated the retrieved SAR-based coseismic displacement with the one estimated by a dense GNSS network, extensively covering the study area. All the SAR-based techniques constrained the surface fault rupture well; however, in comparison with the GNSS-based coseismic displacement, some significant differences were observed. InSAR data showed better performance than MAI and POT data by factors of about two and three, respectively, therefore confirming that InSAR is the most consolidated technique to map surface coseismic displacements. However, MAI and POT data made it possible to better constrain the azimuth displacement and to retrieve the surface rupture trace. Therefore, for cases of strike-slip earthquakes, all the techniques should be exploited to achieve a full synoptic view of the coseismic displacement field.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jesse Kearse

<p>During the 2016, Mw 7.8 Kaikōura earthquake the Kekerengu fault ruptured the ground surface producing a maximum of ~12 m of net displacement (dextral-slip with minor reverse- slip), one of the largest five co-seismic surface rupture displacements so far observed globally. This thesis presents the first combined onshore to offshore dataset of co-seismic ground-surface and vertical seabed displacements along a near-continuous ~83 km long strike-slip dominated earthquake surface rupture of large slip magnitude. Onshore on the Kekerengu, Jordan Thrust, Upper Kowhai, and Manakau faults, we measured the displacement of 117 cultural and natural markers in the field and using airborne LiDAR data. Offshore on the dextral-reverse Needles fault, multibeam bathymetric and high-resolution seismic reflection data image a throw of the seabed of up to 3.5±0.2 m. Mean net slip on the total ~83 km rupture was 5.5±1 m, this is an unusually large mean slip for the rupture length compared to global strike-slip surface ruptures. Surveyed linear features that extend across the entire surface rupture zone show that it varies in width from 13 to 122 m. These cultural features also reveal the across-strike distribution of lateral displacement, 80% of which is, on average, concentrated within the central 43% of the rupture zone. Combining the near-field measurements of fault offset with published, far-field InSAR, continuous GPS, and coastal deformation data, suggests partitioning of oblique plate convergence, with a significant portion of co-seismic contractional deformation (and uplift) being accommodated off-fault in the hanging-wall crust to the northwest of the main rupturing faults.  This thesis also documents in detail the onshore extent of surface fault rupture on the Kekerengu, Jordan Thrust, Upper Kowhai and Manakau faults. I present large-scale maps (up to 1:3,000) and documentary field photographs of this 53 km-long onshore surface rupture zone utilizing field data, post-earthquake LiDAR-derived Digital Elevation Models (DEMs), and post-earthquake ortho-rectified aerial photography. Ground deformation data is most detailed near the Marlborough coast where the 2016 rupture trace is well-exposed on agricultural grassland on the Kekerengu fault. In the southwest, where surface fault rupture traversed the alpine slopes of the Seaward Kaikoura ranges, fault mapping relied heavily on the LiDAR-derived DEMs.   At 24 sites along the Kekerengu fault, I document co-seismic wear striae that were formed during the earthquake and were preserved on free face fault exposures. Nearly all of these striae were distinctly curved along their length, demonstrating that the direction of near-surface fault slip changed with time during rupture of the Kekerengu fault. Co-seismic displacement on the Kekerengu fault initiated as oblique-dextral (mainly dextral-reverse), and subsequently rotated to become nearly-pure dextral slip. These slip trajectories agree with directions of net displacements derived from offset linear features at nearby sites. Temporal rotation of the slip direction may suggest a state of low shear stress on the Kekerengu fault before the earthquake, and a near-complete reduction in stress during the earthquake, as has been inferred for other historic earthquakes that show evidence for changing slip direction with time.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jesse Kearse

<p>During the 2016, Mw 7.8 Kaikōura earthquake the Kekerengu fault ruptured the ground surface producing a maximum of ~12 m of net displacement (dextral-slip with minor reverse- slip), one of the largest five co-seismic surface rupture displacements so far observed globally. This thesis presents the first combined onshore to offshore dataset of co-seismic ground-surface and vertical seabed displacements along a near-continuous ~83 km long strike-slip dominated earthquake surface rupture of large slip magnitude. Onshore on the Kekerengu, Jordan Thrust, Upper Kowhai, and Manakau faults, we measured the displacement of 117 cultural and natural markers in the field and using airborne LiDAR data. Offshore on the dextral-reverse Needles fault, multibeam bathymetric and high-resolution seismic reflection data image a throw of the seabed of up to 3.5±0.2 m. Mean net slip on the total ~83 km rupture was 5.5±1 m, this is an unusually large mean slip for the rupture length compared to global strike-slip surface ruptures. Surveyed linear features that extend across the entire surface rupture zone show that it varies in width from 13 to 122 m. These cultural features also reveal the across-strike distribution of lateral displacement, 80% of which is, on average, concentrated within the central 43% of the rupture zone. Combining the near-field measurements of fault offset with published, far-field InSAR, continuous GPS, and coastal deformation data, suggests partitioning of oblique plate convergence, with a significant portion of co-seismic contractional deformation (and uplift) being accommodated off-fault in the hanging-wall crust to the northwest of the main rupturing faults.  This thesis also documents in detail the onshore extent of surface fault rupture on the Kekerengu, Jordan Thrust, Upper Kowhai and Manakau faults. I present large-scale maps (up to 1:3,000) and documentary field photographs of this 53 km-long onshore surface rupture zone utilizing field data, post-earthquake LiDAR-derived Digital Elevation Models (DEMs), and post-earthquake ortho-rectified aerial photography. Ground deformation data is most detailed near the Marlborough coast where the 2016 rupture trace is well-exposed on agricultural grassland on the Kekerengu fault. In the southwest, where surface fault rupture traversed the alpine slopes of the Seaward Kaikoura ranges, fault mapping relied heavily on the LiDAR-derived DEMs.   At 24 sites along the Kekerengu fault, I document co-seismic wear striae that were formed during the earthquake and were preserved on free face fault exposures. Nearly all of these striae were distinctly curved along their length, demonstrating that the direction of near-surface fault slip changed with time during rupture of the Kekerengu fault. Co-seismic displacement on the Kekerengu fault initiated as oblique-dextral (mainly dextral-reverse), and subsequently rotated to become nearly-pure dextral slip. These slip trajectories agree with directions of net displacements derived from offset linear features at nearby sites. Temporal rotation of the slip direction may suggest a state of low shear stress on the Kekerengu fault before the earthquake, and a near-complete reduction in stress during the earthquake, as has been inferred for other historic earthquakes that show evidence for changing slip direction with time.</p>


2011 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 283-291 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.J.A. Barrell ◽  
N.J. Litchfield ◽  
D.B. Townsend ◽  
M. Quigley ◽  
R.J. Van Dissen ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simone Cesca ◽  
Carla Valenzuela Malebrán ◽  
José Ángel López-Comino ◽  
Timothy Davis ◽  
Carlos Tassara ◽  
...  

&lt;p&gt; A complex seismic sequence took place in 2014 at the Juan Fern&amp;#225;ndez microplate, a small microplate located between Pacific, Nazca and Antarctica plates. Despite the remoteness of the study region and the lack of local data, we were able to resolve earthquake source parameters and to reconstruct the complex seismic sequence, by using modern waveform-based seismological techniques. The sequence started with an exceptional Mw 7.1-6.7 thrust &amp;#8211; strike slip earthquake doublet, the first subevent being the largest earthquake ever recorded in the region and one of the few rare thrust earthquakes in a region otherwise characterized by normal faulting and strike slip earthquakes. The joint analysis of seismicity and focal mechanisms suggest the activation of E-W and NE-SW faults or of an internal curved pseudofault, which is formed in response to the microplate rotation, with alternation of thrust and strike-slip earthquakes. Seismicity migrated Northward in its final phase, towards the microplate edge, where a second doublet with uneven focal mechanisms occurred. The sequence rupture kinematics is well explained by Coulomb stress changes imparted by the first subevent. Our analysis show that compressional stresses, which have been mapped at the northern boundary of the microplate, but never accompanied by large thrust earthquakes, can be accommodated by the rare occurrence of large, impulsive, shallow thrust earthquakes, with a considerable tsunamigenic potential.&lt;/p&gt;


2015 ◽  
Vol 1092-1093 ◽  
pp. 1497-1500
Author(s):  
Li Min Chen ◽  
Hao Xu ◽  
You Fei Li

Coal is typical of sedimentary deposits, Occurrence in a coal basin. The original nearly horizontal continuous coal seam was divided into different size; different depth containing coal segment by late tectonic movement, but its scope is not affected by today's "basin" restrictions. With the concept of coal occurrence tectonic unit to reflect the current Coal Occurrence Characteristics and build a prototype coal basin types that prototype into a coal basin tectonic movement after the formation of today's coal occurrence tectonic unit. In Northwest coal hosting area, the main coal bearing strata include Carboniferous-Permian, Upper Triassic, Lower-Middle Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous, and its distribution is regular; the center and strength of coal accumulation were variation in different coal-forming period; the types of basin are multiple, including Passive Margins, Peripheral Foreland, Intracontinental Rift, Intermontane, Strike-slip pull-apart, Strike-slip pull-apart, Inter-montane; moreover, one belt and two rings constitute the tectonic framework of Northwest coal hosting area.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryo Okuwaki ◽  
Wenyuan Fan

A devastating magnitude 7.2 earthquake struck Southern Haiti on 14 August 2021. The earthquake caused severe damages and over 2000 casualties. Resolving the earthquake rupture process can provide critical insights into hazard mitigation. Here we use integrated seismological analyses to obtain the rupture history of the 2021 earthquake. We find the earthquake first broke a blind thrust fault and then jumped to a disconnected strike-slip fault. Neither of the fault configurations aligns with the left-lateral tectonic boundary between the Caribbean and North American plates. The complex multi-fault rupture may result from the oblique plate convergence in the region that the initial thrust rupture is due to the boundary-normal compression and the following strike-slip faulting originates from the Gonâve microplate block movement, orienting towards the SW-NE direction. The complex rupture development of the earthquake suggests that the regional deformation is accommodated by a network of segmented faults with diverse faulting conditions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 110 (4) ◽  
pp. 1603-1626 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kang Wang ◽  
Douglas S. Dreger ◽  
Elisa Tinti ◽  
Roland Bürgmann ◽  
Taka’aki Taira

ABSTRACT The 2019 Ridgecrest earthquake sequence culminated in the largest seismic event in California since the 1999 Mw 7.1 Hector Mine earthquake. Here, we combine geodetic and seismic data to study the rupture process of both the 4 July Mw 6.4 foreshock and the 6 July Mw 7.1 mainshock. The results show that the Mw 6.4 foreshock rupture started on a northwest-striking right-lateral fault, and then continued on a southwest-striking fault with mainly left-lateral slip. Although most moment release during the Mw 6.4 foreshock was along the southwest-striking fault, slip on the northwest-striking fault seems to have played a more important role in triggering the Mw 7.1 mainshock that happened ∼34  hr later. Rupture of the Mw 7.1 mainshock was characterized by dominantly right-lateral slip on a series of overall northwest-striking fault strands, including the one that had already been activated during the nucleation of the Mw 6.4 foreshock. The maximum slip of the 2019 Ridgecrest earthquake was ∼5  m, located at a depth range of 3–8 km near the Mw 7.1 epicenter, corresponding to a shallow slip deficit of ∼20%–30%. Both the foreshock and mainshock had a relatively low-rupture velocity of ∼2  km/s, which is possibly related to the geometric complexity and immaturity of the eastern California shear zone faults. The 2019 Ridgecrest earthquake produced significant stress perturbations on nearby fault networks, especially along the Garlock fault segment immediately southwest of the 2019 Ridgecrest rupture, in which the coulomb stress increase was up to ∼0.5  MPa. Despite the good coverage of both geodetic and seismic observations, published coseismic slip models of the 2019 Ridgecrest earthquake sequence show large variations, which highlight the uncertainty of routinely performed earthquake rupture inversions and their interpretation for underlying rupture processes.


2011 ◽  
Vol 182 (6) ◽  
pp. 493-506 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gérard Giannerini ◽  
Guillaume Sanchez ◽  
Dimitri Schreiber ◽  
Jean-Marc Lardeaux ◽  
Yann Rolland ◽  
...  

Abstract The Roquebrune-Cap Martin basin (RCMB), developed along the eastern rim of the Nice arc, represents an exclusive sedimentary marker constraining the timing of the deformation in the Nice arc (southern Subalpine chain) during Miocene times. Structural and sedimentological analyses as well as 3D geometrical modeling of the RCMB revealed morphological, structural and sedimentological features characterizing an active tectonic control of the sedimentary infills and the basin development. Structural and microstructural analyses along the eastern boundary of the Nice arc evidenced a N-S left-lateral strike-slip ‘en echelon’ faults system named Mont Gros-St Agnès Castillon relayed by the Biancon E-W thrusts and sheets. The formation of the RCMB appears to be genetically linked to these strike-slip ‘en échelon’ faults. Such characteristics include the presence of the Mont Gros strike-slip fault structural high relief bounding the RCMB to the West, the West-East asymmetry of the sedimentary infill with a laterally transition facies from breccias directly below the fault relief to conglomerates and sandstones in the central part of the basin and the presence of mass wasting in all structural levels of the basin. The onset and the evolution of the basin were driven by transpresssive tectonics, generating a deep and narrow tectonic depression, bounded by steep tectonically controlled slopes. The transpresssive character of the eastern Nice arc boundary where the syn-tectonic RCMB is hosted, accommodate a general southward translation of the Nice arc in response to a N-S shortening regime. The sedimentological and previous paleontological analyses suggest that the activity of the eastern Nice arc transpresssive boundary generating the RCMB and thus the southward motion of the Nice arc, started during the Early Miocene (Aquitanian), continuing through the Late Miocene (Tortonian). The style and the timing of the syn-sedimentary deformation of the Nice arc is coherent in space and time with the one affecting the Digne and Castellane arc.


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