Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; June 2000; v. 90; no. 3;
p. 739-751; DOI: 10.1785/0119990055
© 2000 Seismological Society of America
The 1996 Earthquakes in Sulawesi, Indonesia
J. M. Gómez,
R. Madariaga,
A. Walpersdorf and
E. Chalard
Unidad de Investigación en Ciencias de la
Tierra
Campus Juriquilla-UNAM
Querétaro 76230, Qro.
México
Apdo. Postal 1-742, C.P.
76001
gomez{at}unicit.unam.mx
École Normale Supérieure, Lab. de
Géologie
U.R.A. 1316, 24, Rue Lhomond,
75231 Paris Cedex 05,
France
École des Mines de Paris, Centre de Recherche en
Geophysique
35, rue Saint Honoré
F-77305 Fontainebleau Cedex,
France
We study the rupture process of the 1 January (Mw =
7.9), 16 July (Mw = 6.6), and 22 (Mw =
7) July 1996 earthquakes in Sulawesi, Indonesia. A teleseismic body waveform
inversion of very broadband records shows that these events occurred beneath
the accretionary prism. The main shock was due to a well determined fault with
a strike of 53°N and a very shallow dip of 7°. From its source-time
function duration (30 sec) and the aftershock distribution we estimate a
rupture area of 90 x 60 km2 and an average slip of 1.80 m.
The surface displacement computed with our best model fits well the
displacement vector at the only available GPS station at Tomini. The tsunami
generated by the mainshock had an approximate source radius of 45 km which
roughly agrees with the rupture size estimated above. The earthquakes took
place in a relay zone between the trench and the Palu-Koro transcurrent fault.
They ruptured a shallow dipping thrust fault which corresponds to the
subduction interface under the North Sulawesi arm. The slip vectors of all the
events have a NNW orientation parallel to the direction of convergence between
the North Sulawesi arm and the Celebes Sea. Among the peculiarities of the
rupture process, we found that the July 22 aftershock was the only event to
have a well defined precursor 1.8 sec before the main P-wave
onset.
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