2013
DOI: 10.1002/2013jb010273
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Triggered tremor sweet spots in Alaska

Abstract: To better understand what controls fault slip along plate boundaries, we have exploited the abundance of seismic and geodetic data available from the richly varied tectonic environments composing Alaska. A search for tremor triggered by 11 large earthquakes throughout all of seismically monitored Alaska reveals two tremor “sweet spots”—regions where large‐amplitude seismic waves repeatedly triggered tremor between 2006 and 2012. The two sweet spots locate in very different tectonic environments—one just trench… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…The 16 M ≥ 5.5 triggered earthquakes reported by Pollitz et al [2012] all occur more than 14 h after the IOE, suggesting a failure process must exist that is more complex than Coulomb failure for these larger events [Hill, 2015]. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth 10.1002/2015JB012243 Gomberg and Prejean, 2013;Linville et al, 2014;Tape et al, 2013]. However, the data resolution in our study areas is not applicable to resolving triggered tremor.…”
Section: Triggered M > 5 Earthquakes Indicate a Time-dependent Failurmentioning
confidence: 87%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The 16 M ≥ 5.5 triggered earthquakes reported by Pollitz et al [2012] all occur more than 14 h after the IOE, suggesting a failure process must exist that is more complex than Coulomb failure for these larger events [Hill, 2015]. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth 10.1002/2015JB012243 Gomberg and Prejean, 2013;Linville et al, 2014;Tape et al, 2013]. However, the data resolution in our study areas is not applicable to resolving triggered tremor.…”
Section: Triggered M > 5 Earthquakes Indicate a Time-dependent Failurmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…The 16 M ≥ 5.5 triggered earthquakes reported by Pollitz et al [] all occur more than 14 h after the IOE, suggesting a failure process must exist that is more complex than Coulomb failure for these larger events [ Hill , ]. The IOE did immediately trigger remote tremor and low‐magnitude earthquakes ( M < 4) during the surface wave passage [ Aiken et al , , ; Chao and Obara , ; Fuchs et al , ; Gomberg and Prejean , ; Linville et al , ; Tape et al , ]. However, the data resolution in our study areas is not applicable to resolving triggered tremor.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1). Recent studies have detected ambient and triggered tremor in south-central mainland Alaska (Peterson and Christenson, 2009;Gomberg and Prejean, 2013). The tremor discovered in those studies lie where the Yakutat terrane is transitioning from flat-slab subduction in the west to a zone of collision in the east, resulting in a fold-and-thrust belt (Worthington et al, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We searched for tremor on stations surrounding the central Denali fault, and the triggered tremor generally arrives at station KLU prior to PAX (e.g., Ⓔ Fig. S10), suggesting that they mostly occur further south in the south-central Alaska sweet spot Gomberg and Prejean, 2013). No tremor signal was observed on station DDM (seismic data archived for only 1 yr, from [2009][2010], located north of the central Denali fault.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the last 80 years, four large earthquakes with M w > 8 have occurred: the 1938 M w 8.2 Shumagin Islands, 1957 M w 8.6 Andreanof Islands, 1964 M w 9.2 Good Friday, and 1965 M w 8.7 Rat Islands earthquakes [ Brown et al , ] (Figure ). TT and LFEs have previously been identified in south central Alaska and along the Alaska‐Aleutian Arc [ Brown et al , ; Gomberg and Prejean , ; Peterson et al , ]. Details of their spatiotemporal distribution, however, is poorly known due to limited number of tremor/LFE studies in this area.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%