1. Seismicity Associated with the Sumatra--Andaman Islands Earthquake of 26 December 2004.
- Author
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Dewey, James W., Choy, George, Presgrave, Bruce, Sipkin, Stuart, Tarr, Arthur C., Benz, Harley, Earle, Paul, and Wald, David
- Subjects
EARTHQUAKES ,EARTHQUAKE aftershocks ,SEISMOLOGY - Abstract
The U.S. Geological Survey/National Earthquake information Center (USGS/NEIC) had computed origins for 5000 earthquakes in the Sumatra--Andaman Islands region in the first 36 weeks after the Sumatra--Andaman Islands mainshock of 26 December 2004. The cataloging of earthquakes of m
b (USGS) 5.1 and larger is essentially complete for the time period except for the first half-day following the 26 December mainshock, a period of about two hours following the Nias earthquake of 28 March 2005, and occasionally during the Andaman Sea swarm of 26-30 January 2005. Moderate and larger (mb ≥5.5) aftershocks are absent from most of the deep interplate thrust faults of the segments of the Sumatra--Andaman Islands subduction zone on which the 26 December mainshock occurred, which probably reflects nearly complete release of elastic strain on the seismogenic interplate-thrust during the mainshock. An exceptional thrust-fault source offshore of Banda Aceh may represent a segment of the interplate thrust that was bypassed during the mainshock. The 26 December mainshock triggered a high level of aftershock activity near the axis of the Sunda trench and the leading edge of the overthrust Burma plate. Much near-trench activity is intraplate activity within the subducting plate, but some shallow-focus, near-trench, reverse-fault earthquakes may represent an unusual seismogenic release of interplate compressional stress near the tip of the overriding plate. The interplate-thrust Nias earthquake of 28 March 2005, in contrast to the 26 December aftershock sequence, was followed by many interplate-thrust aftershocks along the length of its inferred rupture zone. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2007
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