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Surface-wave potential for triggering tectonic (nonvolcanic) tremor

David P. Hill
Surface-wave potential for triggering tectonic (nonvolcanic) tremor
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (October 2010) 100 (5A): 1859-1878

Abstract

Source processes commonly posed to explain instances of remote dynamic triggering of tectonic (nonvolcanic) tremor by surface waves include frictional failure and various modes of fluid activation. The relative potential for Love- and Rayleigh-wave dynamic stresses to trigger tectonic tremor through failure on critically stressed thrust and vertical strike-slip faults under the Coulomb-Griffith failure criteria as a function of incidence angle is anticorrelated over the 15- to 30-km-depth range that hosts tectonic tremor. Love-wave potential is high for strike-parallel incidence on low-angle reverse faults and null for strike-normal incidence; the opposite holds for Rayleigh waves. Love-wave potential is high for both strike-parallel and strike-normal incidence on vertical, strike-slip faults and minimal for approximately 45 degrees incidence angles. The opposite holds for Rayleigh waves. This pattern is consistent with documented instances of tremor triggered by Love waves incident on the Cascadia megathrust and the San Andreas fault (SAF) in central California resulting from shear failure on weak faults (apparent friction, mu (super *) < or =0.2). However, documented instances of tremor triggered by surface waves with strike-parallel incidence along the Nankai megathrust beneath Shikoku, Japan, is associated primarily with Rayleigh waves. This is consistent with the tremor bursts resulting from mixed-mode failure (crack opening and shear failure) facilitated by near-lithostatic ambient pore pressure, low differential stress, with a moderate friction coefficient (mu approximately 0.6) on the Nankai subduction interface. Rayleigh-wave dilatational stress is relatively weak at tectonic tremor source depths and seems unlikely to contribute significantly to the triggering process, except perhaps for an indirect role on the SAF in sustaining tremor into the Rayleigh-wave coda that was initially triggered by Love waves.


ISSN: 0037-1106
EISSN: 1943-3573
Serial Title: Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
Serial Volume: 100
Serial Issue: 5A
Title: Surface-wave potential for triggering tectonic (nonvolcanic) tremor
Author(s): Hill, David P.
Affiliation: U. S. Geological Survey, Menlo Park, CA, United States
Pages: 1859-1878
Published: 201010
Text Language: English
Publisher: Seismological Society of America, Berkeley, CA, United States
References: 31
Accession Number: 2010-093085
Categories: Seismology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus.
N48°30'00" - N51°00'00", W128°30'00" - W123°30'00"
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, Copyright, Seismological Society of America. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
Update Code: 201049
Program Name: USGSOPNon-USGS publications with USGS authors
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