Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5781652 Tectonophysics 2017 34 Pages PDF
Abstract
We have located a total of 232 local earthquakes using data recorded by the SANDWICH seismic network from November 2013 to October 2014 in central Tibet across the Bangong-Nujiang suture (BNS). The focal depths of all earthquakes are shallower than 30 km and therefore are in the upper crust. The absence of lower crust earthquakes may imply a weak, ductile lower crust in central Tibet. Moreover, these earthquakes are dispersed throughout conjugate strike-slip fault zones, indicating that evenly distributed upper crustal deformation might predominate in central Tibet. This observation agrees with the hypothesis that conjugate fault zones accommodate coeval east-west extension and north-south contraction via continuous deformation. Moreover, the focal mechanisms show that strike-slip and normal faulting are the dominant types of deformation and that the extension in central Tibet is oriented approximately east-west. Despite some anomalies, the kinematics implied by most of the focal mechanisms correlate well with those of the surface structures.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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