Authors
Edmundo Norabuena, Timothy H Dixon, Susan Schwartz, Heather DeShon, Andrew Newman, Marino Protti, Victor Gonzalez, LeRoy Dorman, Ernst R Flueh, Paul Lundgren, Fred Pollitz, Dan Sampson
Publication date
2004/11
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
Volume
109
Issue
B11
Description
New seismic and geodetic data from Costa Rica provide insight into seismogenic zone processes in Central America, where the Cocos and Caribbean plates converge. Seismic data are from combined land and ocean bottom deployments in the Nicoya peninsula in northern Costa Rica and near the Osa peninsula in southern Costa Rica. In Nicoya, inversion of GPS data suggests two locked patches centered at 14 ± 2 and 39 ± 6 km depth. Interplate microseismicity is concentrated in the more freely slipping intermediate zone, suggesting that small interseismic earthquakes may not accurately outline the updip limit of the seismogenic zone, the rupture zone for future large earthquakes, at least over the short (∼1 year) observation period. We also estimate northwest motion of a coastal “sliver block” at 8 ± 3 mm/yr, probably related to oblique convergence. In the Osa region to the south, convergence is orthogonal to …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
E Norabuena, TH Dixon, S Schwartz, H DeShon… - Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 2004