EGU21-10787
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10787
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Spatio-temporal evolution of afterslip following the Mw 7.8 Pedernales earthquake, Ecuador

Jean-Mathieu Nocquet1,2, Frederique Rolandone3, Patricia Mothes4, and Paul Jarrin3
Jean-Mathieu Nocquet et al.
  • 1University Cote d'Azur, IRD, Geoazur, Valbonne, France (nocquet@geoazur.unice.fr)
  • 2University of Paris, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, Paris, France
  • 3Sorbonne University, ISTEP, Paris, France
  • 4Instituto Geofisico, Escuela Politecnica Nacional, Quito, Ecuador

We use 40 continuous GPS stations in Ecuador to quantify 3 years of the  post-seismic deformation that followed the Mw 7.8 April 16 Pedernales earthquake. We perform a kinematic inversion solving for the daily slip along the subduction to retrieve the afterslip evolution through time and space.

Rolandone et al. (2018) had found that the afterslip during the first 30 days following the earthquake was abnormally large and rapid, mainly developing at discrete patches north and south updip of the co-seismic rupture. We find that large slip and slip rate continue at both location, decreasing through time. However, models suggest that modulations of slip rate occur within those areas, with episods of slip acceleration sometimes associated with the occurrence of moderate size aftershocks.  Aside these patches, afterslip developed updip the co-seismic rupture between the patches and downdip of the coseismic rupture, with little slip occurring within the co-seismic rupture.

The overall model confirms a model of a seismic asperity encompassed in a subduction interface releasing stress through aseismic processes. However, some areas experiencing afterslip appear to be locked before the earthquake. Furthermore, those areas experienced SSE before the earthquake and during the afterslip period, raising the question of the friction parameter controlling their behavior.

In terms of moment, the amount of afterslip after 3 years is equivalent to 90% of the moment released by the Pedernales earthquake. This observation highlights that aseismic slip has an important contribution to the balance of slip during the earthquake cycle along the central Ecuador segment. This observation strengthens the proposed hypothesis of earthquake an super-cycle in central Ecuador (Nocquet et al., 2017), by confirming that the occurrence of three successive major earthquakes within 110 years exceeds the moment accumulation as derived from a decade of interseismic coupling models spanning a decade before the 2016 earthquake.

How to cite: Nocquet, J.-M., Rolandone, F., Mothes, P., and Jarrin, P.: Spatio-temporal evolution of afterslip following the Mw 7.8 Pedernales earthquake, Ecuador, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10787, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10787, 2021.

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