Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; April 2005; v. 95; no. 2;
p. 486-501; DOI: 10.1785/0120040015
© 2005 Seismological Society of America
Meso- and Microstructural Analysis of Coseismic Shear Zone of the 1999 MW 7.6 Chi-Chi Earthquake, Taiwan
Aiming Lin1,
Chyi-Tyi Lee2,
Tadashi Maruyama1 and
Allen Chen3
1 Institute of Geosciences
Faculty
of Science
Shizuoka University
Ohya 836, Shizuoka 422-8529,
Japan
(A.L., T.M.)
2 Institute of Applied
Geology
National Central University
Chung-Li 32001,
Taiwan
(C.-T.L.)
3 Institute of Applied
Geophysics
Taiwan National Ocean University
Keelun 20224,
Taiwan
(A.C.)
The surface rupture of the 1999 Mw 7.6 Chi-Chi (Taiwan)
earthquake was controlled primarily by the pre-existing Chelungpu fault zone,
which is distributed in a wide zone of up to 60 m, although the main coseismic
slip is localized in a narrow shear zone of <0.3 cm. The Chelungpu fault zone
is composed of cataclasite, fault breccia, and gouge zones that are well
observed in both the fault outcrops and the drill cores taken throughout the
fault zone. The foliations developed in the cataclasite and fault breccia zones
are oriented parallel to that of the fault gouge zone where the main coseismic
slip occurred. The structural analyses of the shear zone and fault rocks show
that the Chelungpu fault zone has slipped as a thrust fault with a significant
left-lateral slip component since its formation in the Pleistocene. This oblique
thrust motion is caused by the southeast–northwest oblique convergence
between the Philippine Sea plate and the Eurasian plate.
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