Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; October 2005; v. 95; no. 5;
p. 1637-1653; DOI: 10.1785/0120040158
© 2005 Seismological Society of America
The Effect of Elastic Layering on Inversions of GPS Data for Coseismic Slip and Resulting Stress Changes: Strike-Slip Earthquakes
Elizabeth H. Hearn1 and
Roland Bürgmann2
1 Department of Earth and Ocean
Sciences
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, British Columbia,
Canada
ehearn{at}eos.ubc.ca
(E.H.H.)
2 Department of Earth and Planetary
Sciences
University of California at Berkeley
Berkeley,
California
Burgmann{at}seismo.berkeley.edu
(R.B.)
We investigate the effect of depth-dependent elasticity on slip inversions
and coseismic stress change estimates for large strike-slip earthquakes, using a
series of hypothetical models and the 1999 Izmit, Turkey earthquake as examples.
Slip inversions are performed using both semianalytical and finite-element
solutions for surface displacements due to a shear dislocation in layered and
uniform elastic Earth models. We find that incorporating realistic increases to
shear modulus (µ) with depth in our inversions increases recovered
centroid depth and seismic potency relative to uniform elastic half-space
models. Recovered seismic moment is up to 40% greater for models incorporating
depth-dependent µ than it is for uniform elastic half-space models.
Incorporating depth-dependent µ also increases our estimate of the
maximum slip depth for the Izmit, Turkey, earthquake (to at least 20 km). Our
estimates of coseismic stress change in the upper crust do not change
significantly when we incorporate depth-dependent elasticity in our inversions,
as long as slip at depth is tuned (increased) to match surface displacements.
Coseismic differential stresses in the lower crust increase by up to a factor of
3 in the near field, but further from the fault, stresses from layered and
uniform elastic models are approximately equal. With increasing depth in the
mantle, the ratio of modeled differential stresses for the layered and uniform
elastic models approaches the ratio of mantle µ values for these two
models. We conclude that models of postseismic viscoelastic relaxation following
large strike-slip earthquakes should incorporate depth-dependent elasticity, but
that uniform elastic half-space models are adequate to calculate coseismic
Coulomb stresses in the upper crust for most triggering studies.
Copyright © 2009 by Seismological Society of America