An Active Seismic Zone in Intraplate West Iberia Inferred From High-Resolution Geophysical Data

被引:21
|
作者
Matos, Catarina [1 ]
Custodio, Susana [1 ]
Batlo, Josep [2 ]
Zahradnik, Jiri [3 ]
Arroucau, Pierre [4 ,5 ]
Silveira, Graca [6 ,7 ]
Heimann, Sebastian [8 ]
机构
[1] Univ Lisbon, Inst Dom Luiz, Fac Ciencias, Lisbon, Portugal
[2] Inst Cartog & Geol Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain
[3] Charles Univ Prague, Fac Math & Phys, Prague, Czech Republic
[4] Dublin Inst Adv Studies, Sch Cosm Phys, Geophys Sect, Dublin, Ireland
[5] EDF DIPNN DI TEGG, Aix En Provence, France
[6] Inst Dom Luiz, Lisbon, Portugal
[7] Inst Super Engn Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal
[8] GFZ German Res Ctr Geosci, Potsdam, Germany
基金
爱尔兰科学基金会;
关键词
intraplate earthquakes; slow lithospheric deformation; active faults; Western Iberia; OSSA-MORENA ZONE; STABLE CONTINENTAL REGIONS; SW-IBERIA; CRUSTAL DEFORMATION; MAINLAND PORTUGAL; EARTHQUAKE HAZARD; PLATE BOUNDARY; SAN-ANDREAS; FAULT ZONE; HEAT-FLOW;
D O I
10.1002/2017JB015114
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
Intraplate Iberia is a region of slow lithopsheric deformation (<1mm/yr) with significant historical earthquake activity. Recent high-quality instrumental data have shown that small-magnitude earthquakes collapse along clusters and lineaments, which however do not bear a clear relationship to geologically mapped active structures. In this article, we investigate the controls of these earthquake clusters. In particular, we study two of the identified clustersthe Arraiolos and the Evora seismic zones (ASZ and ESZ), located in the Western Ossa Morena Zone, southwest Iberia. The ASZ marks a sharp boundary between a seismically active region to its south and a more quiet region to its north. We revise historical earthquakes in order to clarify whether earthquake activity in the region is persistent. We use data from a local network to compute accurate epicenters, focal depth, focal mechanisms, and spatiotemporal clustering, thus characterizing ongoing small-scale fracturing. Finally, we analyze complementary data sets, including tomographic models, Global Navigation Satellite Systems data, magnetic anomalies, and gravity anomalies, in order to discuss the factors that control seismogenesis in the two seismic zones. Consistency between earthquake locations, focal mechanisms and Global Navigation Satellite Systems data suggests that the ASZ is an active right-lateral shear zone, which divides two blocks within the Western Ossa Morena Zone. The ESZ seems to localize microseismicity due to its granitic lithology. These results suggest that high-resolution geophysical data have the potential to reveal blocks with different seismogenic and rheological behaviors, which may be used to improve our understanding of fault systems and the assessment of earthquake hazard in slowly deforming regions. Plain Language Summary Mainland Portugal is a region of slow lithospheric deformation. This means that changes in Earth's outmost layerthe lithosphereoccur at very low rates (<1mm/yr). In such environments, faults producing earthquakes are not easy to identify at the Earth's surface, both because their evidence can be gradually erased by wind and water or simply because they do not reach the surface. Recent studies have shown that small earthquakes in mainland Portugal group together delineating seismically more active regions. In this article we focus in two particular groups of earthquakesthe Arraiolos and the Evora seismic zones (ASZ and ESZ) and we investigate why they occur in these particular locations. We obtain precise maps of earthquake epicenters. When possible, we also analyze the direction of slip during the earthquake and the orientation of the fracture on which it occurred. We compare our results with other data sets, such as images of the Earth's interior, that could give hints about the constitution of crust beneath the ASZ and the ESZ. Earthquakes epicenters show fault sections at depth in the ASZ. These faults separate two crustal blocks with distinct material properties. In the ESZ earthquakes are associated to contrasts in crustal materials.
引用
收藏
页码:2885 / 2907
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Evidence for active faults in Kucukcekmece Lagoon (Marmara Sea, Turkey), inferred from high-resolution seismic data
    Alp, Hakan
    GEO-MARINE LETTERS, 2014, 34 (05) : 447 - 455
  • [2] High-resolution structures of the Landers fault zone inferred from aftershock waveform data
    Li, Hongyi
    Zhu, Lupei
    Yang, Hongfeng
    GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL, 2007, 171 (03) : 1295 - 1307
  • [3] Evidence for active faults in Küçükçekmece Lagoon (Marmara Sea, Turkey), inferred from high-resolution seismic data
    Hakan Alp
    Geo-Marine Letters, 2014, 34 : 447 - 455
  • [4] GEOPHYSICAL LINEAMENTS IN MINNESOTA FROM HIGH-RESOLUTION AEROMAGNETIC DATA
    CHANDLER, VW
    REGIONAL GEOPHYSICAL LINEAMENTS: THEIR TECTONIC AND ECONOMIC SIGNIFICANCE, 1989, : 145 - 154
  • [5] High-resolution crustal structure of Haicheng seismic zone in Liaoning, inferred from teleseismic receiver functions of dense array
    Shao, Yuanyuan
    Bai, Lanshu
    Liu, Jiadong
    Sun, Qingshan
    Zhang, Ruiqing
    Wang, Liang
    Jiao, Mingruo
    Jia, Lihua
    Wu, Qingju
    CHINESE JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICS-CHINESE EDITION, 2025, 68 (02): : 517 - 530
  • [7] Rift Basins and Intraplate Earthquakes: New High-Resolution Aeromagnetic Data Provide Insights Into Buried Structures of the Charleston, South Carolina Seismic Zone
    Shah, A. K.
    Pratt, T. L.
    Horton, J. W.
    GEOCHEMISTRY GEOPHYSICS GEOSYSTEMS, 2023, 24 (05)
  • [8] Exploring West Florida escarpment with high-resolution geophysical imaging
    Sager, William W.
    Shyu, Jih-Ping
    Manley, Justin
    SEA TECHNOLOGY, 2008, 49 (06) : 10 - 14
  • [9] Active faulting at the western tip of the Gulf of Corinth, Greece, from high-resolution seismic data
    Beckers, Arnaud
    Hubert-Ferrari, Aurelia
    Beck, Christian
    Bodeux, Sarah
    Tripsanas, Efthymios
    Sakellariou, Dimitris
    De Batist, Marc
    MARINE GEOLOGY, 2015, 360 : 55 - 69
  • [10] Measurement of seismic attenuation from high-resolution crosshole data
    Neep, JP
    Sams, MS
    Worthington, MH
    GEOPHYSICS, 1996, 61 (04) : 1175 - 1188