A comparative study of the Sumatran subduction-zone earthquakes of 1935 and 1984

A Ms 7.7 earthquake struck the western, equatorial coast of Sumatra in December 1935. It was the largest event in the region since the two devastating giant earthquakes of 1833 and 1861. Historical seismograms of this event from several observatories around the world provide precious information tha...

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Main Authors: Rivera, Luis, Sieh, Kerry, Helmberger, Don V., Natawidjaja, Danny H.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/95277
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/8887
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author Rivera, Luis
Sieh, Kerry
Helmberger, Don V.
Natawidjaja, Danny H.
author_facet Rivera, Luis
Sieh, Kerry
Helmberger, Don V.
Natawidjaja, Danny H.
author_sort Rivera, Luis
collection NTU
description A Ms 7.7 earthquake struck the western, equatorial coast of Sumatra in December 1935. It was the largest event in the region since the two devastating giant earthquakes of 1833 and 1861. Historical seismograms of this event from several observatories around the world provide precious information that constrains the source parameters of the earthquake. To more precisely quantify the location, geometry, and mechanism of the 1935 event and to estimate the coseismic deformation, we analyze the best of the available teleseismic historical seismograms by comparing systematically the records of the 1935 earthquake with those of a smaller event that occurred in the same region in 1984. First we constrain the source parameters of the 1984 event using teleseismic records. Then, we compare the records of the 1935 event with those of 1984 from the same sites and instruments. To do this, we choose several time windows in the corresponding seismograms that contain clearly identifiable phases and deconvolve the modern event from the older one. The deconvolutions result in very narrow pulses with similar sizes, thus confirming similar locations and mechanisms for the events. The initiation of the 1984 event was on the subduction interface at a depth of 27 ± 2 km; its M0 is 6.5 × 10^19 N m (Mw is 7.2). The sense of slip was nearly pure thrust, on a plane dipping 12°. The 1935 event also involved rupture of the shallow subduction interface, but was about five times larger (M0 3.3 × 10;20 N m, Mw 7.7) and initiated a few kilometers to the southeast, along strike. The 1935 rupture propagated unilaterally toward the southeast. The along-strike rupture length was about 65 km. From these source parameters, we calculate the surface deformations, assuming an elastic multilayered medium. These deformations compare favorably with those actually recovered from paleoseismic data in the form of coral microatolls.
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spelling ntu-10356/952772020-03-07T12:45:24Z A comparative study of the Sumatran subduction-zone earthquakes of 1935 and 1984 Rivera, Luis Sieh, Kerry Helmberger, Don V. Natawidjaja, Danny H. DRNTU::Science::Geology::Volcanoes and earthquakes A Ms 7.7 earthquake struck the western, equatorial coast of Sumatra in December 1935. It was the largest event in the region since the two devastating giant earthquakes of 1833 and 1861. Historical seismograms of this event from several observatories around the world provide precious information that constrains the source parameters of the earthquake. To more precisely quantify the location, geometry, and mechanism of the 1935 event and to estimate the coseismic deformation, we analyze the best of the available teleseismic historical seismograms by comparing systematically the records of the 1935 earthquake with those of a smaller event that occurred in the same region in 1984. First we constrain the source parameters of the 1984 event using teleseismic records. Then, we compare the records of the 1935 event with those of 1984 from the same sites and instruments. To do this, we choose several time windows in the corresponding seismograms that contain clearly identifiable phases and deconvolve the modern event from the older one. The deconvolutions result in very narrow pulses with similar sizes, thus confirming similar locations and mechanisms for the events. The initiation of the 1984 event was on the subduction interface at a depth of 27 ± 2 km; its M0 is 6.5 × 10^19 N m (Mw is 7.2). The sense of slip was nearly pure thrust, on a plane dipping 12°. The 1935 event also involved rupture of the shallow subduction interface, but was about five times larger (M0 3.3 × 10;20 N m, Mw 7.7) and initiated a few kilometers to the southeast, along strike. The 1935 rupture propagated unilaterally toward the southeast. The along-strike rupture length was about 65 km. From these source parameters, we calculate the surface deformations, assuming an elastic multilayered medium. These deformations compare favorably with those actually recovered from paleoseismic data in the form of coral microatolls. 2012-12-27T04:34:50Z 2019-12-06T19:11:43Z 2012-12-27T04:34:50Z 2019-12-06T19:11:43Z 2002 2002 Journal Article Rivera, L., Sieh, K., Helmberger, D., & Natawidjaja, D. (2002). A Comparative Study of the Sumatran Subduction-Zone Earthquakes of 1935 and 1984. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 92(5), 1721-1736. 0037-1106 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/95277 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/8887 10.1785/0120010106 en Bulletin of the seismological society of America © 2002 Seismological Society of America.
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science::Geology::Volcanoes and earthquakes
Rivera, Luis
Sieh, Kerry
Helmberger, Don V.
Natawidjaja, Danny H.
A comparative study of the Sumatran subduction-zone earthquakes of 1935 and 1984
title A comparative study of the Sumatran subduction-zone earthquakes of 1935 and 1984
title_full A comparative study of the Sumatran subduction-zone earthquakes of 1935 and 1984
title_fullStr A comparative study of the Sumatran subduction-zone earthquakes of 1935 and 1984
title_full_unstemmed A comparative study of the Sumatran subduction-zone earthquakes of 1935 and 1984
title_short A comparative study of the Sumatran subduction-zone earthquakes of 1935 and 1984
title_sort comparative study of the sumatran subduction zone earthquakes of 1935 and 1984
topic DRNTU::Science::Geology::Volcanoes and earthquakes
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/95277
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/8887
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