Authors
John S Pallister, Wendy A McCausland, Sigurjón Jónsson, Zhong Lu, Hani M Zahran, Salah El Hadidy, Abdallah Aburukbah, Ian CF Stewart, Paul R Lundgren, Randal A White, Mohammed RH Moufti
Publication date
2010/10
Journal
Nature Geoscience
Volume
3
Issue
10
Pages
705-712
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
The extensive harrat lava province of Arabia formed during the past 30 million years in response to Red Sea rifting and mantle upwelling. The area was regarded as seismically quiet, but between April and June 2009 a swarm of more than 30,000 earthquakes struck one of the lava fields in the province, Harrat Lunayyir, northwest Saudi Arabia. Concerned that larger damaging earthquakes might occur, the Saudi Arabian government evacuated 40,000 people from the region. Here we use geologic, geodetic and seismic data to show that the earthquake swarm resulted from magmatic dyke intrusion. We document a surface fault rupture that is 8 km long with 91 cm of offset. Surface deformation is best modelled by the shallow intrusion of a north-west trending dyke that is about 10 km long. Seismic waves generated during the earthquakes exhibit overlapping very low- and high-frequency components. We interpret …
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