Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; June 2005; v. 95; no. 3;
p. 818-832; DOI: 10.1785/0120040019
© 2005 Seismological Society of America
Mount Hood Earthquake Activity: Volcanic or Tectonic Origins?
J. Jones1 and
S. D. Malone1
1 Department of Earth and Space
Sciences
University of Washington
Seattle, Washington
98195-1310
josh{at}ess.washington.edu
On 29 June 2002, a MD 4.5 earthquake occurred 4.6 km
south of Mount Hood, Oregon. More than 200 small aftershocks
(MD
3.8) occurred between 29 June and 15 August 2002, by
which time seismicity returned to background levels. We analyze well-constrained
earthquakes from the summer 2002 sequence near Mount Hood, recorded by the
Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN), and well-constrained, small
earthquakes (MD
3.5) recorded by the PNSN
between 1986 and 2002. We apply waveform cross-correlation to selected events,
establish a one-dimensional P-wave velocity model, and relocate the
entire catalog by using the double-difference algorithm of
Waldhauser and Ellsworth
(2000). We find that earthquakes before 2002 occur in four distinct
clusters: (A) a well-defined linear feature, striking N15E, about 5 km south of
the summit, (B) a linear feature, trending northwestsoutheast a few
kilometers south of group A, (C) a few tight clusters located about 9 km
south-southwest of the summit, and (D) a small cluster beneath the summit.
Earthquakes in group D do not appear to lie on a fault and may relate to
volcanic activity. However, almost all earthquakes in the 2002 swarm occur in
group A, south of the summit, at depths similar to earthquakes from previous
swarms. First-motion fault-plane solutions from the mainshock and largest
aftershocks have normal mechanisms, and solutions from well-constrained
aftershocks have normal to oblique normal mechanisms. This is consistent with
the apparent strike of the feature south of Mount Hoods summit and is
similar to focal mechanisms of older earthquakes in group A. b- and
p-values for the summer 2002 earthquakes resemble a tectonic
mainshock-aftershock sequence. We interpret these earthquakes as the
northernmost example of Basin-and-Range seismicity yet recorded and conclude
that the Mount Hood earthquakes do not yet suggest potential for volcanic
unrest.
Copyright © 2009 by Seismological Society of America