Jonas Folesky

and 3 more

We compute stress drops for earthquakes in Northern Chile recorded between 2007to 2021. By applying two different analysis techniques, (1) the spectral ratio (SR) method and (2) the spectral decomposition (SDC) method, a stress drop map for the subduction zone consisting of 51,510 stress drop values is produced. We build an extended set of empirical Green’s function (EGF) events for the SR method by systematic template matching. Outputs are used to compare with results from the SDC approach, where we apply cell-wise obtained global EGF’s to compensate for the structural heterogeneity of the subduction zone. We find a good consistency of results of the two methods. The increased spatial coverage and quantity of stress drop estimates from the SDC method facilitate a consistent stress drop mapping of the different seismo-tectonic domains. Albeit differences of median stress drops are relatively small, strike-perpendicular depth sections clearly reveal systematic variations, with earthquakes within the upper plate, along the interface and at intermediate depth exhibiting distinct values. In particular, interface seismicity is characterized by the lowest observed median value, whereas upper plate earthquakes show noticeably higher stress drop values. Intermediate depth earthquakes show comparatively high average stress drop and a rather strong depth-dependent in-crease of median stress drop.  Additionally, we observe spatio-temporal variability of stress drops related to the occurrence of the two megathrust earthquakes in the study region. The here presented study is the first coherent large scale 3D stress drop mapping of the Northern Chilean subduction zone. It provides an important component for further detailed analysis of the physics of earthquake ruptures.

Jonas Folesky

and 2 more

We compute stress drops from P and S phase spectra for 534 earthquakes in the source region of the 2014 MW 8.1 Iquique megathrust earthquake in the northern Chilean subduction zone. An empirical Green’s function based method is applied to suitable event pairs selected by template matching of eight years of continuous waveform data. We evaluate the parameters involved in the stress drop estimation, consider the effect of the local velocity structure and apply an empirical linear relation between P and S phase related geometry factors (k values). Data redundancy produced by multiple EGFs and the combination of P and S phase spectra leads to a substantial reduction of uncertainty and robust stress drop estimates. The resulting stress drop values show a well-defined log-normal distribution with a median value of 4.36 MPa; most values range between 0.1-100 MPa. There is no evidence for systematic large scale lateral variations of stress drop. A detailed analysis reveals several regions of increased median stress drop, an increase with distance to the interface, but no consistent increase with depth. This suggests that fault regime and fault strength have a stronger impact on the stress drop behavior than absolute stresses. Interestingly, we find a weak time-dependence of the median stress drop, with an increase immediately before the April 1, 2014 MW 8.1 Iquique mainshock, a continuous reduction thereafter and a subsequent recovery to average values. Additionally, the data set indicates a relatively strong dependence of stress drop on magnitude which extends over the entire analyzed magnitude range.