Art2 Tecoman
Art2 Tecoman
Art2 Tecoman
w
= 7.5 Tecoman, Mexico, Earthquake:
New Insights
LUIS QUINTANAR,
1
HE
CTOR E. RODRI
GUEZ-LOZOYA,
2
ROBERTO ORTEGA,
3
JUAN M. GO
MEZ-GONZA
LEZ,
4
TONATIUH DOMI
NGUEZ,
5
CLARA JAVIER,
6
LEONARDO ALCA
NTARA,
7
and CECILIO J. REBOLLAR
8
AbstractAftershock locations, source parameters and slip
distribution in the coupling zone between the overriding North
American and subducted Rivera and Cocos plates were calculated
for the 22 January 2003 Tecoman earthquake. Aftershock locations
lie north of the El Gordo Graben with a northwest-southeast trend
along the coast and superimposed on the rupture areas of the 1932
(M
w
= 8.2) and 1995 (M
w
= 8.0) earthquakes. The Tecoman
earthquake ruptured the northwest sector of the Colima gap, how-
ever, half of the gap remains unbroken. The aftershock area has a
rectangular shape of 42 2 by 56 2 km with a shallow dip of
roughly 12 of the Wadati-Benioff zone. Fault geometry calculated
with the Nabelek (1984) inversion procedure is: (strike, dip,
rake) = (277, 27, 78). From the teleseimic body wave spectra
and assuming a circular fault model, we estimated source duration
of 20 2 s, a stress drop of 5.4 2.5 MPa and a seismic moment
of 2.7 .7 9 10
20
Nm. The spatial slip distribution on the fault
plane was estimated using new additional near eld strong motion
data (54 km from the epicenter). We conrm their main conclu-
sions, however we found four zones of seismic moment release
clearly separated. One of them, not well dened before, is located
toward the coast down dip. This observation is the result of adding
newdata in the inversion. We calculated a maximumslip of 3.2 m, a
source duration of 30 s and a seismic moment of 1.88 9 10
20
Nm.
Key words: Rupture process, focal mechanism inversion,
waveform modeling.
1. Introduction
The subduction zone that encompasses the Mex-
ican states of Jalisco and Colima, (Fig. 1a) has
produced the largest earthquakes in Mexico. Offshore
of the state of Colima, the Rivera, Cocos and North
America plates interact (Fig. 1a). In this seismogenic
area the 1932, magnitude 8.2, Jalisco earthquake
occurred, the largest earthquake in Mexico in recent
documented seismological history (SINGH et al.,
1985; SUA
BE
BE
LEK, (1984)
method given by (strike, dip, slip) = (277, 27, 78).
We used a larger fault area in order to follow the
same procedure of YAGI et al., (2004), even though
the observed aftershock area is smaller. We consid-
ered a rupture area with a width of 70 km, a length of
100 km and divided the fault plane into 14 9 20 sub-
faults with length of 5 km and width of 5 km. Twenty
ve kilometers depth of the initial front rupture was
assumed. The slip-rate function on each sub-fault was
expanded into a series of twelve triangles with a rise
time of 2.0 s and the slip angle kept unchanged
during the rupture. We used a rupture wave velocity
of 3.3 km/s.
It is instructive to investigate how well the MNZ
accelerogram ts with our estimated fault geometry
(strike, dip, slip) = (277, 27, 78) and YAGI et al.
(2004) fault geometry (strike, dip, slip) = (300, 20,
93). Figure 9 shows the comparison of the observed
and synthetic accelerograms of MNZ with both fault
Figure 7
Average displacement spectra of teleseismic P waveforms of the Tecoman earthquake. f is the corner frequency and dashed lines indicate the
trend at lower and higher frequencies. The slope at higher frequencies is -2.4
L. Quintanar et al. Pure Appl. Geophys.
geometries. Both geometries reproduce the main
amplitudes, but our fault geometry t better the later
parts of the accelerograms of the vertical and north
south components; however both geometries failed to
adequately t the eastwest component, even though
our fault geometry better t the initial onset of the
rst arrivals.
We performed the inversion with the near eld
strong motion data and the far eld P-waveforms.
Comparisons of the observed and synthetic wave-
forms, shown in Fig. 10, indicate that the ts are
good. The seismic moment was 1.88 9 10
20
Nm
equivalent to a moment magnitude of 7.5. The source
time duration lasted nearly 30 s, but the majority of
the energy was released during the rst 20 s, in
agreement with the source time duration calculated
with the teleseimic spectra and NA
BE
BE
BE
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w
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(Received February 11, 2010, revised September 22, 2010, accepted September 23, 2010)
Source Characteristics of Tecoman Earthquake