Title of article :
Ball-and-socket tectonic rotation during the 2013 Balochistan earthquake
Author/Authors :
Barnhart، نويسنده , , W.D. and Hayes، نويسنده , , G.P. and Briggs، نويسنده , , R.W. and Gold، نويسنده , , R.D. and Bilham، نويسنده , , R.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages :
7
From page :
210
To page :
216
Abstract :
The September 2013 M w 7.7 Balochistan earthquake ruptured a ∼200-km-long segment of the curved Hoshab fault in southern Pakistan with 10 ± 0.2   m of peak sinistral and ∼ 1.7 ± 0.8   m of dip slip. This rupture is unusual because the fault dips 60 ± 15 ° towards the focus of a small circle centered in northwest Pakistan, and, despite a 30° increase in obliquity along strike, the ratios of strike and dip slip remain relatively uniform. Surface displacements and geodetic and teleseismic source inversions quantify a bilateral rupture that propagated rapidly at shallow depths from a transtensional jog near the northern end of the rupture. Static friction prior to rupture was unusually weak ( μ < 0.05 ), and friction may have approached zero during dynamic rupture. Here we show that the inward-dipping Hoshab fault defines the northern rim of a structural unit in southeast Makran that rotates – akin to a 2-D ball-and-socket joint – counter-clockwise in response to Indiaʹs penetration into the Eurasian plate. This rotation accounts for complexity in the Chaman fault system and, in principle, reduces seismic potential near Karachi; nonetheless, these findings highlight deficiencies in strong ground motion equations and tectonic models that invoke Anderson–Byerlee faulting predictions.
Keywords :
block rotations , seismology , geodesy , continental strike slip earthquakes
Journal title :
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Serial Year :
2014
Journal title :
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Record number :
2332926
Link To Document :
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