Revisiting the North Chile seismic gap segmentation using GPS-derived interseismic coupling
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Métois, M.
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Revisiting the North Chile seismic gap segmentation using GPS-derived interseismic coupling
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Abstract
No major earthquake occurred in North Chile since the 1877Mw 8.6 subduction earthquake that
produced a huge tsunami. However, geodetic measurements conducted over the last decade in
this area show that the upper plate is actually deforming, which reveals some degree of locking
on the subduction interface. This accumulation of elastic deformation is likely to be released in
a future earthquake. Because of the long elapsed time since 1877 and the rapid accumulation
of deformation (thought to be 6–7 cm yr−1), many consider this area is a mature seismic
gap where a major earthquake is due and seismic hazard is high. We present a new Global
Positioning System (GPS) velocity field, acquired between 2008 and 2012, that describes in
some detail the interseismic deformation between 18◦S and 24◦S. We invert for coupling
distribution on the Nazca-South America subduction interface using elastic modelling. Our
measurements require that, at these latitudes, 10 to 12mmyr−1 (i.e. 15 per cent of the whole
convergence rate) are accommodated by the clockwise rotation of an Andean block bounded
to the East by the subandean fold-and-thrust belt. This reduces the accumulation rate on the
subduction interface to 56mmyr−1 in this area. Coupling variations on the subduction interface
both along-strike and along-dip are described. We find that the North Chile seismic gap is
segmented in at least two highly locked segments bounded by narrow areas of weak coupling.
This coupling segmentation is consistent with our knowledge of the historical ruptures and of
the instrumental seismicity of the region. Intersegment zones (Iquique, Mejillones) correlate
with high background seismic rate and local tectonic complexities on the upper or downgoing
plates. The rupture of either the Paranal or the Loa segment alone could easily produce a Mw
8.0–8.3 rupture, and we propose that the Loa segment (from 22.5◦S to 20.8◦S) may be the one
that ruptured in 1877.
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Geophys. J. Int. (2013) 194, 1283–1294
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