Title of article :
T Waves from the 1998 Papua New Guinea Earthquake and its Aftershocks: Timing the Tsunamigenic Slump
Author/Authors :
Emile A. Okal، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
T waves recorded at hydrophone and seismic stations following the Papua New Guinea
earthquake of 17 July 1998 and its aftershocks show that a small event at 09:02 GMT featured source
properties incompatible with an elastic dislocation of appropriate body-wave magnitude (mb ¼ 4:4). These
include an exceptional duration (47 s at the Wake Island hydrophone station WK31), a spectrum rich in
high frequencies (7 to 12 Hz), and a generally low spectral amplitude. These characteristics can be
explained by the model of an underwater slump, accelerating from a standstill and eventually slowing
down. The relocation of the 09:02 event is compatible with its location within an amphitheater inside which
shipboard cruises in 1998 and 1999 documented the presence of a 4 – km3 geologically fresh slump. We
propose that the slump took place at 09:02 on 17 July 1998, i.e., 13 minutes after the mainshock, and that it
generated the locally catastrophic tsunami, whose properties (amplitude and distribution of runup; timing)
could not be explained by a dislocation model.
Keywords :
T waves , tsunamis. , landslides
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics