Limit on slip rate and timing of recent seismic ground-ruptures on the Jinghong fault, SE of the eastern Himalayan syntaxis

Quantifying slip rates and earthquake occurrence of active faults on the Shan Plateau, southeast of the easternHimalayan syntaxis, is critical to assessing the seismic hazard and understanding the kinematics and geody-namics of this region. Most previous estimates of slip rates are averaged over eit...

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Main Authors: Shi, Xuhua, Weldon, Ray, Liu-Zeng, Jing, Wang, Yu, Weldon, Elise, Sieh, Kerry, Li, Zhigang, Zhang, Jinyu, Yao, Wenqian, Li, Zhanfei
Other Authors: Earth Observatory of Singapore
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2019
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/107492
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/49710
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1074922020-09-26T21:24:58Z Limit on slip rate and timing of recent seismic ground-ruptures on the Jinghong fault, SE of the eastern Himalayan syntaxis Shi, Xuhua Weldon, Ray Liu-Zeng, Jing Wang, Yu Weldon, Elise Sieh, Kerry Li, Zhigang Zhang, Jinyu Yao, Wenqian Li, Zhanfei Earth Observatory of Singapore Eastern Himalayan Syntaxis Shan Plateau Science::Geology Quantifying slip rates and earthquake occurrence of active faults on the Shan Plateau, southeast of the easternHimalayan syntaxis, is critical to assessing the seismic hazard and understanding the kinematics and geody-namics of this region. Most previous estimates of slip rates are averaged over either many millions of years usingoffset geological markers or decades using GPS. Well-constrained millennial slip rates of these faults remainsparse and constraints on recurrence rates of damaging earthquakes exist only for a few faults. Here we in-vestigate the millennial slip rate and timing of recent earthquakes on the Jinghong fault, one of the geomor-phically most significant sinistral-slip faults on the central Shan Plateau. We map and reconstruct fault offset(18 ± 5 m) of alluvial fan features at Manpa on the central Jinghong fault, using a 0.1 m-resolution digitalsurface model obtained from an unmanned aerial vehicle survey. We establish a slip rate,≤2.5 ± 0.7 mm/yrover the past ~7000 years, using pit-exposed stratigraphy. This millennial slip rate is consistent with ratesaveraged over both decadal and million-year timescales. Excavations at three sites near the town of Gelanghe onthe northeastern Jinghong fault demonstrate 1) that the last seismic ground-rupture occurred between 482 and889 cal yr BP, most likely in the narrower window 824–767 cal yr BP, if the lack of large earthquakes in thehistorical earthquake record is reliable, and 2) that multiple fault ruptures have occurred since ~3618 cal yr BP.Combining thisfinding with a lack of large earthquakes in the ~800-year-long Chinese historic record in thisregion, we suggest an average recurrence interval of seismic ground-ruptures on the order of ~1000 years. Thisrecurrence interval is consistent with the slip rate of the Jinghong fault and the size and earthquake frequency onother sinistral faults on the Shan Plateau. NRF (Natl Research Foundation, S’pore) Published version 2019-08-20T09:15:35Z 2019-12-06T22:32:22Z 2019-08-20T09:15:35Z 2019-12-06T22:32:22Z 2018 Journal Article Shi, X., Weldon, R., Liu-Zeng, J., Wang, Y., Weldon, E., Sieh, K., … Li, Z. (2018). Limit on slip rate and timing of recent seismic ground-ruptures on the Jinghong fault, SE of the eastern Himalayan syntaxis. Tectonophysics, 734-735148-166. doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2018.04.011 0040-1951 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/107492 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/49710 10.1016/j.tecto.2018.04.011 en Tectonophysics © 2018 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/BY-NC-ND/4.0/). 19 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Eastern Himalayan Syntaxis
Shan Plateau
Science::Geology
spellingShingle Eastern Himalayan Syntaxis
Shan Plateau
Science::Geology
Shi, Xuhua
Weldon, Ray
Liu-Zeng, Jing
Wang, Yu
Weldon, Elise
Sieh, Kerry
Li, Zhigang
Zhang, Jinyu
Yao, Wenqian
Li, Zhanfei
Limit on slip rate and timing of recent seismic ground-ruptures on the Jinghong fault, SE of the eastern Himalayan syntaxis
description Quantifying slip rates and earthquake occurrence of active faults on the Shan Plateau, southeast of the easternHimalayan syntaxis, is critical to assessing the seismic hazard and understanding the kinematics and geody-namics of this region. Most previous estimates of slip rates are averaged over either many millions of years usingoffset geological markers or decades using GPS. Well-constrained millennial slip rates of these faults remainsparse and constraints on recurrence rates of damaging earthquakes exist only for a few faults. Here we in-vestigate the millennial slip rate and timing of recent earthquakes on the Jinghong fault, one of the geomor-phically most significant sinistral-slip faults on the central Shan Plateau. We map and reconstruct fault offset(18 ± 5 m) of alluvial fan features at Manpa on the central Jinghong fault, using a 0.1 m-resolution digitalsurface model obtained from an unmanned aerial vehicle survey. We establish a slip rate,≤2.5 ± 0.7 mm/yrover the past ~7000 years, using pit-exposed stratigraphy. This millennial slip rate is consistent with ratesaveraged over both decadal and million-year timescales. Excavations at three sites near the town of Gelanghe onthe northeastern Jinghong fault demonstrate 1) that the last seismic ground-rupture occurred between 482 and889 cal yr BP, most likely in the narrower window 824–767 cal yr BP, if the lack of large earthquakes in thehistorical earthquake record is reliable, and 2) that multiple fault ruptures have occurred since ~3618 cal yr BP.Combining thisfinding with a lack of large earthquakes in the ~800-year-long Chinese historic record in thisregion, we suggest an average recurrence interval of seismic ground-ruptures on the order of ~1000 years. Thisrecurrence interval is consistent with the slip rate of the Jinghong fault and the size and earthquake frequency onother sinistral faults on the Shan Plateau.
author2 Earth Observatory of Singapore
author_facet Earth Observatory of Singapore
Shi, Xuhua
Weldon, Ray
Liu-Zeng, Jing
Wang, Yu
Weldon, Elise
Sieh, Kerry
Li, Zhigang
Zhang, Jinyu
Yao, Wenqian
Li, Zhanfei
format Article
author Shi, Xuhua
Weldon, Ray
Liu-Zeng, Jing
Wang, Yu
Weldon, Elise
Sieh, Kerry
Li, Zhigang
Zhang, Jinyu
Yao, Wenqian
Li, Zhanfei
author_sort Shi, Xuhua
title Limit on slip rate and timing of recent seismic ground-ruptures on the Jinghong fault, SE of the eastern Himalayan syntaxis
title_short Limit on slip rate and timing of recent seismic ground-ruptures on the Jinghong fault, SE of the eastern Himalayan syntaxis
title_full Limit on slip rate and timing of recent seismic ground-ruptures on the Jinghong fault, SE of the eastern Himalayan syntaxis
title_fullStr Limit on slip rate and timing of recent seismic ground-ruptures on the Jinghong fault, SE of the eastern Himalayan syntaxis
title_full_unstemmed Limit on slip rate and timing of recent seismic ground-ruptures on the Jinghong fault, SE of the eastern Himalayan syntaxis
title_sort limit on slip rate and timing of recent seismic ground-ruptures on the jinghong fault, se of the eastern himalayan syntaxis
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/107492
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/49710
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