Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданиях › статья › Рецензирование
Full Aftershock Sequence of the M w 6.9 2003 Boumerdes Earthquake, Algeria : Space–Time Distribution, Local Tomography and Seismotectonic Implications. / Kherroubi, Abdelaziz; Yelles-Chaouche, Abdelkrim; Koulakov, Ivan и др.
в: Pure and Applied Geophysics, Том 174, № 7, 01.07.2017, стр. 2495-2521.Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданиях › статья › Рецензирование
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Full Aftershock Sequence of the M w 6.9 2003 Boumerdes Earthquake, Algeria
T2 - Space–Time Distribution, Local Tomography and Seismotectonic Implications
AU - Kherroubi, Abdelaziz
AU - Yelles-Chaouche, Abdelkrim
AU - Koulakov, Ivan
AU - Déverchère, Jacques
AU - Beldjoudi, Hamoud
AU - Haned, Abderrahmane
AU - Semmane, Fethi
AU - Aidi, Chafik
PY - 2017/7/1
Y1 - 2017/7/1
N2 - We present a detailed analysis of the aftershocks of the May 21, 2003 Boumerdes earthquake (Mw = 6.9) recorded by 35 seismological stations and 2 OBS deployed in the epicentral area. This network recorded the aftershock activity for about 1 year and resulted in locating about 2500 events. The five main aftershocks (4.7 <M <5.8) display thrust faulting consistent with the main shock, except for the second event (M5.8, 29/05/2003) which depicts a strike-slip focal solution at the western tip of the rupture zone. Most aftershocks are clustered near the main rupture plane, in the footwall or at the westernmost tip of the 2003 Boumerdes rupture area. Many aftershocks last over the whole seismic crisis ahead (north) of the main rupture zone, forming a diffuse, low-angle surface within the footwall where the coseismic static stress change is predicted to increase. At the SW tip of the rupture, short-lived clusters locate at intersections of faults near the contact between the inner (Kabylia) and outer (Tell) zones. The tomographic inversion depicts high-velocity P- and S-wave anomalies coinciding with Miocene magmatic intrusive bodies in the upper crust, partially hidden by surrounding basins. The area of the main shock is associated with a large low-velocity body subdivided into sub-domains, including Neogene basins on land and offshore. Our results support a rupture model strongly controlled by geological inhomogeneities and extending as ramp–flat–ramp systems upward, favoring heterogeneous slip and segmentation in the fault plane with strong afterslip toward the surface. The diffuse aftershock activity in the footwall evidences an inherited discontinuity at mid-crustal depth that we interpret as the contact of Kabylian and African (Tethyan) continental crusts that were stacked during the Upper Miocene collision.
AB - We present a detailed analysis of the aftershocks of the May 21, 2003 Boumerdes earthquake (Mw = 6.9) recorded by 35 seismological stations and 2 OBS deployed in the epicentral area. This network recorded the aftershock activity for about 1 year and resulted in locating about 2500 events. The five main aftershocks (4.7 <M <5.8) display thrust faulting consistent with the main shock, except for the second event (M5.8, 29/05/2003) which depicts a strike-slip focal solution at the western tip of the rupture zone. Most aftershocks are clustered near the main rupture plane, in the footwall or at the westernmost tip of the 2003 Boumerdes rupture area. Many aftershocks last over the whole seismic crisis ahead (north) of the main rupture zone, forming a diffuse, low-angle surface within the footwall where the coseismic static stress change is predicted to increase. At the SW tip of the rupture, short-lived clusters locate at intersections of faults near the contact between the inner (Kabylia) and outer (Tell) zones. The tomographic inversion depicts high-velocity P- and S-wave anomalies coinciding with Miocene magmatic intrusive bodies in the upper crust, partially hidden by surrounding basins. The area of the main shock is associated with a large low-velocity body subdivided into sub-domains, including Neogene basins on land and offshore. Our results support a rupture model strongly controlled by geological inhomogeneities and extending as ramp–flat–ramp systems upward, favoring heterogeneous slip and segmentation in the fault plane with strong afterslip toward the surface. The diffuse aftershock activity in the footwall evidences an inherited discontinuity at mid-crustal depth that we interpret as the contact of Kabylian and African (Tethyan) continental crusts that were stacked during the Upper Miocene collision.
KW - aftershock analysis
KW - Boumerdes
KW - earthquake
KW - seismic tomography
KW - seismotectonic
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85021719848&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00024-017-1571-5
DO - 10.1007/s00024-017-1571-5
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85021719848
VL - 174
SP - 2495
EP - 2521
JO - Pure and Applied Geophysics
JF - Pure and Applied Geophysics
SN - 0033-4553
IS - 7
ER -
ID: 10096389