This is possibly the first time we have observed the deep faulting
created as a plate breaks free from part of itself in real time. Of
course, this behavior is evident in the rocks themselves and is long
established and well understood.
At least, geology is now practiced everywhere and the globe is
becoming heavily instrumented. The result is that occurrences are
now been well observed and with computer technology, readily
simulated and tracked. There is still plenty to do but the data base
is nicely tightening up as is well demonstrated here. Of course, the
process will take centuries.
Big quake was part
of crustal plate breakup
by Staff Writers
Salt Lake City UT (SPX) Sep 27, 2012
This
map of the Indian Ocean region shows boundaries of Earth's tectonic
plates in the area, and the epicenters (red stars) of two great
earthquakes that happened April 11, 2012. A new study from the
University of Utah and University of California, Santa Cruz, says the
main shock measured 8.7 in magnitude, about 40 times larger than the
previous estimate of 8.6. An 8.2-magnitude quake followed two hours
later.The scientists explain how at least four faults ruptured during
the 8.7 main shock, and how both great quakes are likely part of the
breakup of the Indo-Australian Plate into separate subplates. The
northeastward-moving plate is breaking up over scores of millions of
years because the western part of the plate is bumping into Asia and
slowing down, while the eastern part is sliding more easily beneath
Sumatra and the Sunda plate. Credit: Keith Koper, University of Utah
Seismograph Stations.
Seismologists have
known for years that the Indo-Australian plate of Earth's crust is
slowly breaking apart, but they saw it in action last April when at
least four faults broke in a magnitude-8.7 earthquake that may be the
largest of its type ever recorded.
The great Indian Ocean
quake of April 11, 2012 previously was reported as 8.6 magnitude, and
the new estimate means the quake was 40 percent larger than had been
believed, scientists from the University of Utah and University of
California, Santa Cruz, report in the Sept. 27 issue of the journal
Nature.
The quake was caused
by at least four undersea fault ruptures southwest of Sumatra,
Indonesia, within a 2-minute, 40-second period. It killed at least
two people, and eight others died from heart attacks. The quake was
felt from India to Australia, including throughout South Asia and
Southeast Asia.
If the four ruptures
were considered separate quakes, their magnitudes would have been
8.5, 7.9, 8.3 and 7.8 on the "moment magnitude" scale used
to measure the largest quakes, the scientists report.
The 8.7 main shock
broke three faults that were parallel but offset from each other -
known as en echelon faults - and a fourth fault that was
perpendicular to and crossed the first fault.
The new study
concludes that the magnitude-8.7 quake and an 8.2 quake two hours
later were part of the breakup of the Indian and Australian subplates
along a yet-unclear boundary beneath the Indian Ocean west of Sumatra
and southeast of India - a process that started roughly 50 million
years ago and that will continue for millions more.
"We've never seen
an earthquake like this," says study co-author Keith Koper, an
associate professor geophysics and director of the University of Utah
Seismograph Stations.
"This is part of
the messy business of breaking up a plate. ... This is a geologic
process. It will take millions of years to form a new plate
boundary and, most likely, it will take thousands of similar large
quakes for that to happen."
All four faults that
broke in the 8.7 quake and the fifth fault that ruptured in the 8.2
quake were strike-slip faults, meaning ground on one side of the
fault moves horizontally past ground on the other side.
The great quake of
last April 11 "is possibly the largest strike-slip earthquake
ever seismically recorded," although a similar size quake in
Tibet in 1950 was of an unknown type, according to the new study,
which was led by two University of California, Santa Cruz,
seismologists: graduate student Han Yue and Thorne Lay, a professor
of Earth and planetary sciences. The National Science Foundation
funded the study.
The 8.7 jolt also "is
probably the largest intraplate [within a single tectonic plate of
Earth's crust] ever seismically recorded," Lay, Yue and Koper
add. Most of Earth's earthquakes occur at existing plate boundaries.
The researchers cannot
be certain the April great quake was the largest intraplate quake or
the largest strike-slip quake because "we are comparing it
against historic earthquakes long before we had modern seismometers,"
says Koper.
Why the Great Quake
Didn't Unleash Major Tsunamis
Koper says the 2012 quakes likely were triggered, at least in part, by changes in crustal stresses caused by the magnitude-9.1 Sumatra-Andaman earthquake of Dec. 26, 2004 - a jolt that generated massive tsunamis that killed most of the 228,000 victims in the Indian Ocean region.
The fact the 8.7 and
8.2 quakes were generated by horizontal movements along seafloor
strike-slip faults - not by vertical motion along thrust faults -
explains why they didn't generate major tsunamis.
The 8.7 quake caused
small tsunamis, the largest of which measured about 12 inches in
height at Meulaboh, Indonesia, according to the U.S. Geological
Survey.
Without major
tsunamis, the great earthquake caused "very little damage and
death, especially for this size of an earthquake, because it happened
in the ocean and away from coastlines," and on strike-slip
faults, says Koper.
The researchers
studied the quake using a variety of methods to analyze the seismic
waves it generated.
Because the same data
can be interpreted in various ways, Koper says it is conceivable that
more than four fault segments broke during the 8.7 quake -
conceivably five or even six - although four fault ruptures is most
likely.
Breaking Up is Hard to
Do
The Indo-Australian plate is breaking into two or perhaps three pieces (some believe a Capricorn subplate is separating from the west side of the Indian subplate). The magnitude-8.7 and 8.2 great quakes on April 11 occurred over a broad area where the India and Australian subplates are being sheared apart.
"What we're
seeing here is the Indo-Australian plate fragmenting into two
separate plates," says Lay.
The breakup of the
northeast-moving Indo-Australian plate is happening because it is
colliding with Asia in the northwest, which slows down the western
part of the plate, while the eastern part of the plate continues
moving more easily by diving or "subducting" under the
island of Sumatra to the northeast. The subduction zone off Sumatra
caused the catastrophic 2004 magnitude-9.1 quake and tsunami.
Seismic analysis shows
the April 11 quakes "involve rupture of a very complex network
of faults, for which we have no documented precedent in recorded
seismic history," the researchers write.
The analysis revealed
this sequence for the faults ruptures that generated the 8.7 quake,
and the estimated fault rupture lengths and slippage amounts:
+ The quake began with
the 50-second rupture of a fault extending west-northwest to
east-southeast, with an epicenter a few hundred miles southwest of
Sumatra. The fault ruptured along a roughly 90-mile length, breaking
"bilaterally" both west-northwestward and
east-southeastward, and also at least 30 miles deep, "almost
ripping through the whole plate," Koper says. The seafloor on
one side of the fault slipped about 100 feet past the seafloor on the
fault's other side.
+ The second fault,
which slipped about 25 feet, began to rupture 40 seconds after
the quake began. This rupture extended an estimated 60 miles to 120
miles north-northeast to south-southwest - perpendicular to the
first fault and crossing it.
+ The third fault was
parallel to the first fault and about 90 to the miles southwest of
it. It started breaking 70 seconds after the quake began and
ruptured along a length of about 90 miles. This fault slipped about
70 feet.
+ The fourth fault
paralleled the first and third faults, but was to the northwest of
both of them. It began to rupture 145 seconds after the quake began
and continued to do so for 15 seconds until the quake ended after a
total time of 2 minutes and 40 seconds. The fault rupture was roughly
30 miles to 60 miles long. The ground on one side of this fault
slipped about 20 feet past ground on the other side.
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