The 2019–2020 Southwest Puerto Rico Earthquake Sequence: Seismicity and Faulting
Blaž Vičič, Seyyedmaalek Momeni, Alessandra Borghi, Anthony Lomax, Abdelkrim Aoudia
Abstract
Abstract The 2019–2020 Southwest Puerto Rico earthquake sequence ruptured multiple faults with several moderate magnitude earthquakes. Here, we investigate the seismotectonics of this fault system using high-precision hypocenter relocation and inversion of the near-field strong motions of the five largest events in the sequence (5.6≤Mw≤6.4) for kinematic rupture models. The Mw 6.4 mainshock occurred on a northeast-striking, southeast-dipping normal fault. The rupture nucleated offshore ∼15 km southeast of Indios at the depth of 8.6 km and extended southwest–northeast and up-dip with an average speed of 1.55 km/s, reaching the seafloor and shoreline after about 8 s. The 6 January 2020 (10:32:23) Mw 5.7 and the 7 January 2020 (11:18:46) Mw 5.8 events occurred on two east–southeast-striking, near-vertical, left-lateral strike-slip faults. However, the 7 January 2020 (08:34:05) Mw 5.6 normal-faulting aftershock, which occurred only 10 min after the Mw 6.4 normal-faulting mainshock, ruptured on a fault with almost the same strike as the mainshock but situated ∼8 km farther east, forming a set of parallel faults in the fault system. On 11 January 2020, an Mw 6.0 earthquake occurred on a north–northeast-striking, westing-dipping fault, orthogonal to the faults hosting the strike-slip earthquakes. We apply template matching for the detection of missed, small-magnitude earthquakes to study the spatial evolution of the main part of the sequence. Using the template-matching results along with Global Positioning System analysis, we image the temporal evolution of a foreshock sequence (Caja swarm). We propose that the swarm and the main sequence were a response to a tectonic transient that most affected the whole Puerto Rico Island.