Authors
Thorne Lay, Hiroo Kanamori, Charles J Ammon, Meredith Nettles, Steven N Ward, Richard C Aster, Susan L Beck, Susan L Bilek, Michael R Brudzinski, Rhett Butler, Heather R DeShon, Goran Ekstrom, Kenji Satake, Stuart Sipkin
Publication date
2005/5/20
Journal
science
Volume
308
Issue
5725
Pages
1127-1133
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
The two largest earthquakes of the past 40 years ruptured a 1600-kilometer-long portion of the fault boundary between the Indo-Australian and southeastern Eurasian plates on 26 December 2004 [seismic moment magnitude (Mw) = 9.1 to 9.3] and 28 March 2005 (Mw = 8.6). The first event generated a tsunami that caused more than 283,000 deaths. Fault slip of up to 15 meters occurred near Banda Aceh, Sumatra, but to the north, along the Nicobar and Andaman Islands, rapid slip was much smaller. Tsunami and geodetic observations indicate that additional slow slip occurred in the north over a time scale of 50 minutes or longer.
Total citations
200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320243713311881898385105646864586561517686574138
Scholar articles
T Lay, H Kanamori, CJ Ammon, M Nettles, SN Ward… - science, 2005
S Neetu, I Suresh, R Shankar, D Shankar, SSC Shenoi… - Science, 2005