Authors
Marta Béjar-Pizarro, Daniel Carrizo, Anne Socquet, R Armijo, Sergio Barrientos, Francis Bondoux, Sylvain Bonvalot, J Campos, D Comte, JB De Chabalier, O Charade, A Delorme, Germinal Gabalda, J Galetzka, J Genrich, A Nercessian, M Olcay, F Ortega, I Ortega, Dominique Rémy, JC Ruegg, M Simons, C Valderas, C Vigny
Publication date
2010/10/1
Journal
Geophysical Journal International
Volume
183
Issue
1
Pages
390-406
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
The Mw 7.7 2007 November 14 earthquake had an epicentre located close to the city of Tocopilla, at the southern end of a known seismic gap in North Chile. Through modelling of Global Positioning System (GPS) and radar interferometry (InSAR) data, we show that this event ruptured the deeper part of the seismogenic interface (30–50 km) and did not reach the surface. The earthquake initiated at the hypocentre and was arrested ∼150 km south, beneath the Mejillones Peninsula, an area already identified as an important structural barrier between two segments of the Peru–Chile subduction zone. Our preferred models for the Tocopilla main shock show slip concentrated in two main asperities, consistent with previous inversions of seismological data. Slip appears to have propagated towards relatively shallow depths at its southern extremity, under the Mejillones Peninsula. Our analysis of post-seismic …
Total citations
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