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Precursory transient slip during the 2001 Mw = 8.4 Peru earthquake sequence from continuous GPS

Two‐hour position estimates from a continuous GPS station located at Arequipa, Peru, document precursory deformation beginning 18 hours prior to an Mw = 7.6 aftershock of the June 23rd 2001 Mw = 8.4 earthquake. This preseismic signal appears on the north and east components as a slow displacement wi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geophysical research letters 2002-11, Vol.29 (21), p.28-1-28-4
Main Authors: Melbourne, Timothy I., Webb, Frank H.
Format: Article
Language:English
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:Two‐hour position estimates from a continuous GPS station located at Arequipa, Peru, document precursory deformation beginning 18 hours prior to an Mw = 7.6 aftershock of the June 23rd 2001 Mw = 8.4 earthquake. This preseismic signal appears on the north and east components as a slow displacement with an amplitude twice that of the subsequent coseismic. Analysis of three years of 18‐hour rate measurement shows this signal to be unprecedented and beyond four standard deviations from the mean rate. The best fitting centroid is directionally consistent with slow slip along the plate interface and suggests the preseismic deformation arises from creep near the aftershock rupture. This implies the Nazca‐South American plate interface slipped slowly prior to seismogenic faulting. These observations indicate the Mw = 7.6 earthquake grew out of slow slip along the plate interface and clearly demonstrate the breadth of slip rates accommodated by subduction zone plate interfaces.
ISSN:0094-8276
1944-8007
DOI:10.1029/2002GL015533