Authors
Ya-Ju Hsu, Paul Segall, Shui-Beih Yu, Long-Chen Kuo, Charles A Williams
Publication date
2007/5/1
Journal
Geophysical Journal International
Volume
169
Issue
2
Pages
367-379
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
We use GPS displacements collected in the 15 months after the 1999 Chi-Chi, Taiwan earthquake (Mw 7.6) to evaluate whether post-seismic deformation is better explained by afterslip or viscoelastic relaxation of the lower crust and upper mantle. We find that all viscoelastic models tested fail to fit the general features in the post-seismic GPS displacements, in contrast to the satisfactory fit obtained with afterslip models. We conclude that afterslip is the dominant mechanism in the 15-month period, and invert for the space–time distribution of afterslip, using the Extended Network Inversion Filter. Our results show high slip rates surrounding the region of greatest coseismic slip. The slip-rate distribution remains roughly stationary over the 15-month period. In contrast to the limited coseismic slip on the décollement, afterslip is prominent there. Maximum afterslip of 0.57 m occurs downdip and to the east of the …
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