Coastal uplift and tsunami effects associated to the 2010 Mw8.8 Maule earthquake in Central Chile
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Vargas Easton, Víctor
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Coastal uplift and tsunami effects associated to the 2010 Mw8.8 Maule earthquake in Central Chile
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Abstract
On February 27, 2010 at 03:34:08 AM an Mw8.8 earthquake, with epicenter located off Cobquecura
(73.24°W; 36.29°S), severely hit Central Chile. The tsunami waves that followed this event affected the coastal regions
between the cities of Valparaíso and Valdivia, with minor effects as far as Coquimbo. The earthquake occurred along the
subduction of the Nazca oceanic plate beneath the South American plate. Coseismic coastal uplift was estimated through
observations of bleached lithothamnioids crustose coralline algae, which were exposed after the mainshock between
34.13°S and 38.34°S, suggesting the latitudinal distribution of the earthquake rupture. The measured coastal uplift values
varied between 240±20 cm at sites closer to the trench along the western coast of the Arauco peninsula and 15±10 cm
at sites located farther east. A maximum value of 260±50 cm was observed at the western coast of Santa María Island,
which is similar to the reported uplift associated with the 1835 earthquake at Concepción. Land subsidence values on
the order of 0.5 m to 1 m evidenced a change in polarity and position of the coseismic hinge at 110-120 km from the
trench. In four sites along the coast we observed a close match between coastal uplift values deduced from bleached
lithothamnioids algae and GPS measurements. According to field observations tsunami heights reached ca. 14 m in the
coastal area of the Maule Region immediately north of the epicenter, and diminished progressively northwards to 4-2
m near Valparaíso. Along the coast of Cobquecura, tsunami height values were inferior to 2-4 m. More variable tsunami
heights of 6-8 m were measured at Dichato-Talcahuano and Tirúa-Puerto Saavedra, in the Biobío and Arauco regions,
respectively, to the south of the epicenter. According to eyewitnesses, the tsunami reached the coast between 12 to 20
and 30 to 45 minutes in areas located closer and faraway from the earthquake rupture zone, respectively. Destructive
tsunami waves arrived also between 2.5 and 4.5 hours after the mainshock, especially along the coast of the Biobío and
Arauco regions. The tsunami effects were highly variable along the coast, as a result of geomorphological and bathymetric
local conditions, besides potential complexities induced by the main shock.
General note
Resumen en inglés y español. Texto en inglés.
Patrocinador
This work is a contribution of the Laboratorio
Internacional Asociado (LIA) Montessus de Ballore,
Universidad de Chile-CNRS (France), for earthquakes
research. Field studies were facilitated by Núcleo Milenio
en Sismotectónica y Peligro Sísmico (CIIT-MB; Grant
P06-064-F; GV), Fondecyt #11085022 (MF), Fondecyt
#1070279 and 1101034 (AT), Institut de Recherche pour
le Développement (IRD; SC), Institut de Radioprotection
et de Sûreté Nucléaire (SB), and project ME3157/2-1 from
Deutsche Forschungsgemeindschaft (DFG; DM).
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/125726
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Andean Geology 38 (1): 219-238. January, 2011
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