Using coral geodesy to investigate seismic cycle in the banyak islands, Indonesia

The location of the Banyak Islands above the down-dip limit of the 2005 Nias-Simeulue earthquake rupture provides a unique opportunity to study the seismic cycle. The synthesis of sea level histories based on Porites genus corals at three sites spanning a 40-km transect perpendicular to the Sunda tr...

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Main Authors: Sieh, Kerry, Genrich, Joachim, Prayudi, Dudi, Suprihanto, Imam, Galetzka, John, Philibosian, Belle E., Meltzner, Aron J., Suwargadi, Bambang W., Natawidjaja, Danny H.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2013
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/95492
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/9352
https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2009AM/finalprogram/abstract_164951.htm
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-954922019-12-06T19:15:55Z Using coral geodesy to investigate seismic cycle in the banyak islands, Indonesia Sieh, Kerry Genrich, Joachim Prayudi, Dudi Suprihanto, Imam Galetzka, John Philibosian, Belle E. Meltzner, Aron J. Suwargadi, Bambang W. Natawidjaja, Danny H. The location of the Banyak Islands above the down-dip limit of the 2005 Nias-Simeulue earthquake rupture provides a unique opportunity to study the seismic cycle. The synthesis of sea level histories based on Porites genus corals at three sites spanning a 40-km transect perpendicular to the Sunda trench allows a reconstruction of the interseismic, coseismic, and postseismic deformation that occurred before, during, and after the 2005 event. During the earthquake, the western island of Bangkaru uplifted while the eastern islands subsided, suggesting that the island group is located above the down-dip limit of slip. Early postseismic motions suggest that much of the coseismic subsidence in the Banyak Islands will be recovered quickly by postseismic uplift in the decades following the earthquake, with low rates of subsidence occurring in the latter part of the interseismic period. This deformation pattern implies that the Banyak Islands overlie the down-dip edge of a locked patch on the megathrust. This asperity probably slips only during large earthquakes whereas the adjacent down-dip region of the fault slips with initially accelerated postseismic rates, slowing and perhaps becoming completely locked late in the interseismic interval. However, the island of Bangkaru which experienced coseismic uplift has had little or no interseismic or postseismic subsidence, suggesting that an updip slip event is required for elastic recovery. 2013-03-07T07:17:10Z 2019-12-06T19:15:55Z 2013-03-07T07:17:10Z 2019-12-06T19:15:55Z 2009 2009 Journal Article PHILIBOSIAN, B. E., MELTZNER, A. J., SIEH, K., SUWARGADI, B. W., NATAWIDJAJA, D. H., GENRICH, J., et al. (2009). Using Coral Geodesy to Investigate Seismic Cycle in the Banyak Islands, Indonesia. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, 41(7), 409. 0016-7592 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/95492 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/9352 https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2009AM/finalprogram/abstract_164951.htm en Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs © 2009 The Geological Society of America (GSA)
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
description The location of the Banyak Islands above the down-dip limit of the 2005 Nias-Simeulue earthquake rupture provides a unique opportunity to study the seismic cycle. The synthesis of sea level histories based on Porites genus corals at three sites spanning a 40-km transect perpendicular to the Sunda trench allows a reconstruction of the interseismic, coseismic, and postseismic deformation that occurred before, during, and after the 2005 event. During the earthquake, the western island of Bangkaru uplifted while the eastern islands subsided, suggesting that the island group is located above the down-dip limit of slip. Early postseismic motions suggest that much of the coseismic subsidence in the Banyak Islands will be recovered quickly by postseismic uplift in the decades following the earthquake, with low rates of subsidence occurring in the latter part of the interseismic period. This deformation pattern implies that the Banyak Islands overlie the down-dip edge of a locked patch on the megathrust. This asperity probably slips only during large earthquakes whereas the adjacent down-dip region of the fault slips with initially accelerated postseismic rates, slowing and perhaps becoming completely locked late in the interseismic interval. However, the island of Bangkaru which experienced coseismic uplift has had little or no interseismic or postseismic subsidence, suggesting that an updip slip event is required for elastic recovery.
format Article
author Sieh, Kerry
Genrich, Joachim
Prayudi, Dudi
Suprihanto, Imam
Galetzka, John
Philibosian, Belle E.
Meltzner, Aron J.
Suwargadi, Bambang W.
Natawidjaja, Danny H.
spellingShingle Sieh, Kerry
Genrich, Joachim
Prayudi, Dudi
Suprihanto, Imam
Galetzka, John
Philibosian, Belle E.
Meltzner, Aron J.
Suwargadi, Bambang W.
Natawidjaja, Danny H.
Using coral geodesy to investigate seismic cycle in the banyak islands, Indonesia
author_facet Sieh, Kerry
Genrich, Joachim
Prayudi, Dudi
Suprihanto, Imam
Galetzka, John
Philibosian, Belle E.
Meltzner, Aron J.
Suwargadi, Bambang W.
Natawidjaja, Danny H.
author_sort Sieh, Kerry
title Using coral geodesy to investigate seismic cycle in the banyak islands, Indonesia
title_short Using coral geodesy to investigate seismic cycle in the banyak islands, Indonesia
title_full Using coral geodesy to investigate seismic cycle in the banyak islands, Indonesia
title_fullStr Using coral geodesy to investigate seismic cycle in the banyak islands, Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Using coral geodesy to investigate seismic cycle in the banyak islands, Indonesia
title_sort using coral geodesy to investigate seismic cycle in the banyak islands, indonesia
publishDate 2013
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/95492
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/9352
https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2009AM/finalprogram/abstract_164951.htm
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