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Structure-controlled asperities of the 1920 Haiyuan M8.5 and 1927 Gulang M8 earthquakes, NE Tibet, China, revealed by high-resolution seismic tomography

Quan Sun, Shunping Pei, Zhongxiong Cui, Yongshun John Chen, Yanbing Liu, Xiaotian Xue, Jiawei Li, Lei Li, Hong Zuo

2021Scientific Reports28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Detailed crustal structure of large earthquake source regions is of great significance for understanding the earthquake generation mechanism. Numerous large earthquakes have occurred in the NE Tibetan Plateau, including the 1920 Haiyuan M8.5 and 1927 Gulang M8 earthquakes. In this paper, we obtained a high-resolution three-dimensional crustal velocity model around the source regions of these two large earthquakes using an improved double-difference seismic tomography method. High-velocity anomalies encompassing the seismogenic faults are observed to extend to depths of 15 km, suggesting the asperity (high-velocity area) plays an important role in the preparation process of large earthquakes. Asperities are strong in mechanical strength and could accumulate tectonic stress more easily in long frictional locking periods, large earthquakes are therefore prone to generate in these areas. If the close relationship between the aperity and high-velocity bodies is valid for most of the large earthquakes, it can be used to predict potential large earthquakes and estimate the seismogenic capability of faults in light of structure studies.

Topics & Concepts

Asperity (geotechnical engineering)SeismologyGeologyPlateau (mathematics)TectonicsSeismic tomographyHigh resolutionSeismic velocityGeophysicsMantle (geology)Remote sensingGeotechnical engineeringMathematical analysisMathematicsearthquake and tectonic studiesHigh-pressure geophysics and materialsGeological and Geochemical Analysis
Structure-controlled asperities of the 1920 Haiyuan M8.5 and 1927 Gulang M8 earthquakes, NE Tibet, China, revealed by high-resolution seismic tomography | Litcius