Tectonic tremors in the Northern Mexican subduction zone remotely triggered by the 2017 M w8.2 Tehuantepec earthquake

Abstract Surface waves from the 2017 M w8.2 Tehuantepec earthquake remotely triggered tectonic tremors in the Jalisco region, approximately 1000 km WNW in the northern Mexican subduction zone. This is the first observation of tremor triggering in this region and one of the largest known examples of...

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Main Authors: Masatoshi Miyazawa, Miguel Ángel Santoyo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-01-01
Series:Earth, Planets and Space
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40623-020-01331-x
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spelling doaj-46a14485cad949a0969d1773b0c2b5582021-01-10T12:57:22ZengSpringerOpenEarth, Planets and Space1880-59812021-01-0173111110.1186/s40623-020-01331-xTectonic tremors in the Northern Mexican subduction zone remotely triggered by the 2017 M w8.2 Tehuantepec earthquakeMasatoshi Miyazawa0Miguel Ángel Santoyo1Disaster Prevention Research Institute, Kyoto UniversityInstituto de Geofísica, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de MéxicoAbstract Surface waves from the 2017 M w8.2 Tehuantepec earthquake remotely triggered tectonic tremors in the Jalisco region, approximately 1000 km WNW in the northern Mexican subduction zone. This is the first observation of tremor triggering in this region and one of the largest known examples of a triggered tremor in the world. Although prior studies have found tectonic tremors triggered by teleseismic waves in subduction zones and plate boundaries, further investigation of tremor triggering is crucially important for understanding the causative mechanism. We calculate the stress and strain changes across the three-dimensional plate interface attributable to seismic waves from the earthquake by full wavefield simulation. The maximum magnitude of the dynamic strain tensor eigenvalues on the plate interface, where tremors likely occur, is approximately 10–6. The subducting slab geometry effectively amplifies triggering waves. The triggering Coulomb failure stress changes resolved for a thrust fault plane consistent with the geometry are estimated to be approximately 10–40 kPa. The relationship between the triggering stress and triggered tremor amplitude may indicate that the aσ of the rate–state-dependent friction law is 10–100 kPa.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40623-020-01331-x2017 Tehuantepec earthquakeTectonic tremorRemote triggeringWavefield simulation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Masatoshi Miyazawa
Miguel Ángel Santoyo
spellingShingle Masatoshi Miyazawa
Miguel Ángel Santoyo
Tectonic tremors in the Northern Mexican subduction zone remotely triggered by the 2017 M w8.2 Tehuantepec earthquake
Earth, Planets and Space
2017 Tehuantepec earthquake
Tectonic tremor
Remote triggering
Wavefield simulation
author_facet Masatoshi Miyazawa
Miguel Ángel Santoyo
author_sort Masatoshi Miyazawa
title Tectonic tremors in the Northern Mexican subduction zone remotely triggered by the 2017 M w8.2 Tehuantepec earthquake
title_short Tectonic tremors in the Northern Mexican subduction zone remotely triggered by the 2017 M w8.2 Tehuantepec earthquake
title_full Tectonic tremors in the Northern Mexican subduction zone remotely triggered by the 2017 M w8.2 Tehuantepec earthquake
title_fullStr Tectonic tremors in the Northern Mexican subduction zone remotely triggered by the 2017 M w8.2 Tehuantepec earthquake
title_full_unstemmed Tectonic tremors in the Northern Mexican subduction zone remotely triggered by the 2017 M w8.2 Tehuantepec earthquake
title_sort tectonic tremors in the northern mexican subduction zone remotely triggered by the 2017 m w8.2 tehuantepec earthquake
publisher SpringerOpen
series Earth, Planets and Space
issn 1880-5981
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract Surface waves from the 2017 M w8.2 Tehuantepec earthquake remotely triggered tectonic tremors in the Jalisco region, approximately 1000 km WNW in the northern Mexican subduction zone. This is the first observation of tremor triggering in this region and one of the largest known examples of a triggered tremor in the world. Although prior studies have found tectonic tremors triggered by teleseismic waves in subduction zones and plate boundaries, further investigation of tremor triggering is crucially important for understanding the causative mechanism. We calculate the stress and strain changes across the three-dimensional plate interface attributable to seismic waves from the earthquake by full wavefield simulation. The maximum magnitude of the dynamic strain tensor eigenvalues on the plate interface, where tremors likely occur, is approximately 10–6. The subducting slab geometry effectively amplifies triggering waves. The triggering Coulomb failure stress changes resolved for a thrust fault plane consistent with the geometry are estimated to be approximately 10–40 kPa. The relationship between the triggering stress and triggered tremor amplitude may indicate that the aσ of the rate–state-dependent friction law is 10–100 kPa.
topic 2017 Tehuantepec earthquake
Tectonic tremor
Remote triggering
Wavefield simulation
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40623-020-01331-x
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AT miguelangelsantoyo tectonictremorsinthenorthernmexicansubductionzoneremotelytriggeredbythe2017mw82tehuantepecearthquake
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