Subducting slab ultra-slow velocity layer coincident with silent earthquakes in southern Mexico

Great earthquakes have repeatedly occurred on the plate interface in a few shallow-dipping subduction zones where the subducting and overriding plates are strongly locked. Silent earthquakes (or slow slip events) were recently discovered at the down-dip extension of the locked zone and interact with...

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Published in:Science
Main Authors: Song, Teh-Ru Alex, Helmberger, Donald V., Brudzinski, Michael R., Clayton, Robert W., Davis, Paul, Pérez-Campos, Xyoli, Singh, Shri K.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: American Association for the Advancement of Science 2009
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1167595
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spelling ftcaltechauth:oai:authors.library.caltech.edu:0vj8b-6zt68 2024-09-15T18:41:02+00:00 Subducting slab ultra-slow velocity layer coincident with silent earthquakes in southern Mexico Song, Teh-Ru Alex Helmberger, Donald V. Brudzinski, Michael R. Clayton, Robert W. Davis, Paul Pérez-Campos, Xyoli Singh, Shri K. 2009-04-24 https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1167595 unknown American Association for the Advancement of Science https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1167595 oai:authors.library.caltech.edu:0vj8b-6zt68 eprintid:14176 resolverid:CaltechAUTHORS:20090507-090314466 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Other Science, 324(5926), 502-506, (2009-04-24) info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2009 ftcaltechauth https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1167595 2024-08-06T15:35:02Z Great earthquakes have repeatedly occurred on the plate interface in a few shallow-dipping subduction zones where the subducting and overriding plates are strongly locked. Silent earthquakes (or slow slip events) were recently discovered at the down-dip extension of the locked zone and interact with the earthquake cycle. Here, we show that locally observed converted SP arrivals and teleseismic underside reflections that sample the top of the subducting plate in southern Mexico reveal that the ultra-slow velocity layer (USL) varies spatially (3 to 5 kilometers, with an S-wave velocity of ~2.0 to 2.7 kilometers per second). Most slow slip patches coincide with the presence of the USL, and they are bounded by the absence of the USL. The extent of the USL delineates the zone of transitional frictional behavior. © 2009 American Association for the Advancement of Science. 23 October 2008; accepted 20 February 2009. We thank S. Sacks, P. Silver, S. Shirey, M. Bostock, J.-P. Avouav, and V. Manea for helpful discussions; R. Engdahl provided the global relocated seismic catalog used in fig. S10. We thank CENS at UCLA for support and the entire MASE team for making the MASE data available. We thank H. Hinojosa-Prieto, E. Cabral-Cano, A. Arciniega, O. Diaz-Molina, and C. DeMets for sharing their work on episodic tremor and slip in Oaxaca. Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology Data Management Center and Canadian National Data Centre provided the GEOSCOPE data and Yellowknife short-period data used in this analysis, respectively. Station UNM is operated and maintained by Servicio Sismológical Nacional. This work is partially supported by NSF grant EAR-0636012. This is Tectonic Observatory contribution 10015. T.-R.A.S. is supported by a Carnegie fellowship at the Department of Terrestrial Magnetism. Published - Song2009p2048Science.pdf Supplemental Material - SUPPSong2009p2048Science.pdf Article in Journal/Newspaper Yellowknife Caltech Authors (California Institute of Technology) Science 324 5926 502 506
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description Great earthquakes have repeatedly occurred on the plate interface in a few shallow-dipping subduction zones where the subducting and overriding plates are strongly locked. Silent earthquakes (or slow slip events) were recently discovered at the down-dip extension of the locked zone and interact with the earthquake cycle. Here, we show that locally observed converted SP arrivals and teleseismic underside reflections that sample the top of the subducting plate in southern Mexico reveal that the ultra-slow velocity layer (USL) varies spatially (3 to 5 kilometers, with an S-wave velocity of ~2.0 to 2.7 kilometers per second). Most slow slip patches coincide with the presence of the USL, and they are bounded by the absence of the USL. The extent of the USL delineates the zone of transitional frictional behavior. © 2009 American Association for the Advancement of Science. 23 October 2008; accepted 20 February 2009. We thank S. Sacks, P. Silver, S. Shirey, M. Bostock, J.-P. Avouav, and V. Manea for helpful discussions; R. Engdahl provided the global relocated seismic catalog used in fig. S10. We thank CENS at UCLA for support and the entire MASE team for making the MASE data available. We thank H. Hinojosa-Prieto, E. Cabral-Cano, A. Arciniega, O. Diaz-Molina, and C. DeMets for sharing their work on episodic tremor and slip in Oaxaca. Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology Data Management Center and Canadian National Data Centre provided the GEOSCOPE data and Yellowknife short-period data used in this analysis, respectively. Station UNM is operated and maintained by Servicio Sismológical Nacional. This work is partially supported by NSF grant EAR-0636012. This is Tectonic Observatory contribution 10015. T.-R.A.S. is supported by a Carnegie fellowship at the Department of Terrestrial Magnetism. Published - Song2009p2048Science.pdf Supplemental Material - SUPPSong2009p2048Science.pdf
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Song, Teh-Ru Alex
Helmberger, Donald V.
Brudzinski, Michael R.
Clayton, Robert W.
Davis, Paul
Pérez-Campos, Xyoli
Singh, Shri K.
spellingShingle Song, Teh-Ru Alex
Helmberger, Donald V.
Brudzinski, Michael R.
Clayton, Robert W.
Davis, Paul
Pérez-Campos, Xyoli
Singh, Shri K.
Subducting slab ultra-slow velocity layer coincident with silent earthquakes in southern Mexico
author_facet Song, Teh-Ru Alex
Helmberger, Donald V.
Brudzinski, Michael R.
Clayton, Robert W.
Davis, Paul
Pérez-Campos, Xyoli
Singh, Shri K.
author_sort Song, Teh-Ru Alex
title Subducting slab ultra-slow velocity layer coincident with silent earthquakes in southern Mexico
title_short Subducting slab ultra-slow velocity layer coincident with silent earthquakes in southern Mexico
title_full Subducting slab ultra-slow velocity layer coincident with silent earthquakes in southern Mexico
title_fullStr Subducting slab ultra-slow velocity layer coincident with silent earthquakes in southern Mexico
title_full_unstemmed Subducting slab ultra-slow velocity layer coincident with silent earthquakes in southern Mexico
title_sort subducting slab ultra-slow velocity layer coincident with silent earthquakes in southern mexico
publisher American Association for the Advancement of Science
publishDate 2009
url https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1167595
genre Yellowknife
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op_source Science, 324(5926), 502-506, (2009-04-24)
op_relation https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1167595
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