EGU22-6099
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-6099
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Recurrent episodes of transient deformation in NW Sulawesi, Indonesia

Nicolai Nijholt1, Wim Simons1, Taco Broerse2, Joni Efendi3, Dina Sarsito4, and Riccardo Riva5
Nicolai Nijholt et al.
  • 1Delft University of Technology, Faculty of Aerospace Engineering, Space Engineering, Delft, Netherlands (n.nijholt-2@tudelft.nl)
  • 2Utrecht University, Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht, Netherlands
  • 3Badan Informasi Geospasial, Bogor, Indonesia
  • 4Institut Teknologi Bandung (ITB), Bandung, Indonesia
  • 5Delft University of Technology, Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Geosciences and Remote Sensing, Netherlands

The Celebes Sea subducts beneath the North Arm of Sulawesi, Indonesia, at the Minahassa trench. Over the past three decades, only a few Mw>7 earthquakes ruptured this plate interface, despite a 40 mm/yr convergence rate. The left-lateral Palu-Koro fault delineates the extent of the overriding plate at the western termination of the Minahassa subduction zone and hosted a Mw7.5 earthquake in September 2018. Observations of post-seismic surface motion following the 2018 event were interpreted in a previous study to result from afterslip that extended underneath the co-seismic rupture plane. A mismatch between observed post-seismic surface motions and predictions from afterslip distributions remained at the North Arm of Sulawesi.

In this study we revisit and reprocess the GNSS observations in NW Sulawesi. We analyse the post-2018 time series to determine whether the post-seismic signal can be ascribed to a single source. This is not the case, as we detect another, yet smaller amplitude signal. We take a Bayesian approach and find that this smaller magnitude signal corresponds to slow slip on the Minahassa subduction interface. This delayed-triggered, (apparently aseismic) slow slip event occurred just east of the 1996 Mw7.9 megathrust rupture.

The 20-year long time series is characterized by four additional periods of transient surface motion. Three of these periods are likely the result of distinct slow slip events and one is a post-seismic signal from the 2008 subduction Mw7.4 earthquake. The presumed slow slip events generally take more than 300 days to quiet down again with a recurrence interval of about five years.

How to cite: Nijholt, N., Simons, W., Broerse, T., Efendi, J., Sarsito, D., and Riva, R.: Recurrent episodes of transient deformation in NW Sulawesi, Indonesia, EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-6099, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-6099, 2022.