Jökull


Jökull - 01.01.2010, Side 11

Jökull - 01.01.2010, Side 11
Fifteen years of CGPS in Iceland modate the right-lateral transform motion between these two segments of the ridge, the Húsavík-Flatey fault (HFF) and the Grímsey oblique rift (GOR) (Fig- ure 1). A third zone, the Dalvík zone, is indicated by seismicity about 30 km south of the HFF (Einars- son, 1991, 2008) where earthquakes as large as Ms 7 have occurred, latest in 1963. These three zones com- prise the Tjörnes Fracture Zone (TFZ). The last ma- jor earthquake rupturing the on-shore part of the HFF, where the fault runs through a town, occurred in 1872, and another major earthquake may therefore possibly be due on the fault system. It is thus important to es- timate the slip rate, slip deficit and resulting moment accumulation on the two fault systems to gain further information about the seismic hazard in the region. The observed GPS velocities in north Iceland show a gradual increase as one crosses the TFZ (Figures 1 and 4). Preliminary modeling of the CGPS velocities show that the distribution of motion between HFF and GOR appears to be closer to 30/70 (Metzger and Jóns- son, 2010) than to the 40/60 percent estimated earlier (Geirsson et al., 2006) from a more sparse network. Despite the low slip rate of the HFF, the accumulated moment on the HFF since 1872 would still correspond to an earthquake of a magnitude just below 7 (Metzger and Jónsson, 2010). Earthquakes On June 17, 2000, an earthquake sequence started in the South Iceland Seismic Zone with a magnitude 6.5 event. The event triggered earthquakes across south- west Iceland, all the way west to the Reykjanes penin- sula, with the largest triggered event being a magni- tude 6.5 earthquake that occurred 81 hours later, lo- cated 17 km west of the initial mainshock (Árnadóttir et al., 2001, 2003, 2004; Geirsson et al., 2006). The CGPS network was rather sparse at the time, but pro- vided important constraints on the co-seismic offsets from these events. The June 2000 sequence demon- strated the need for automatic processing of the data with low latency, which was initiated at IMO shortly after the earthquakes. An earthquake doublet with a composite Mw=6.3 struck the western part of the South Iceland Seismic Zone on May 29, 2008. Within a few seconds of the onset of the first mainshock, the second event was triggered on a fault located 5 km further west (Hreinsdóttir et al., 2009). A clear co- seismic offset is observed in the time series at the CGPS stations in the epicentral area, with a maximum offset of about 20 cm (Figure 2). The 29 May 2008 earthquake sequence is the first event recorded by the high rate CGPS network in Ice- land (Hreinsdóttir et al., 2009). The two mainshocks occurred so close in space and time that the seismic waves from the second rupture were embedded in the coda from the first event, making precise location and timing of the second event difficult using conventional seismic data. Source models of the two main faults were estimated from static offsets of the CGPS sta- tions. Based on these source models and the high- rate CGPS time series, Hreinsdóttir et al. (2009) con- cluded that the second fault ruptured within 3 seconds of the initial mainshock. Data from the CGPS net- work therefore provided important constraints on lo- cation, timing, and magnitudes of the earthquakes. Post-seismic deformation was observed after both the 2000 and 2008 earthquake sequences. During the first months after the 2000 sequence, deformation was most rapid in the epicentral area and dominated by poroelastic rebound, as observed by InSAR (Jónsson et al., 2003). A slower transient was observed from annual campaign GPS measurements during the first 4–5 years following the main shocks (Árnadóttir et al., 2005). Modeling of the GPS data indicates fairly low viscosities, with 5–10×1018 Pa s in the lower crust and 3×1018 Pa s in the upper mantle (Árnadóttir et al., 2005). Subsequent analysis of InSAR data indi- cate that the year-scale transient signal is more likely due to visco-elastic relaxation in the lower crust and upper mantle, rather than afterslip (Jónsson, 2008). A ∼2 cm deformation transient was observed at the CGPS station HVER in the week following the May 2008 earthquakes (Figure 2). The post-seismic defor- mation following the May 2008 earthquakes appears to be less pronounced than the signals observed after the June 2000 earthquakes. This is perhaps not sur- prising since the June 2000 earthquakes were signifi- cantly larger events. The main shocks in the June 2000 and May 2008 sequences released about half of the moment accumu- lated by plate motion since the previous earthquake JÖKULL No. 60 11
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