--> Abstract: The Role of Fluids in Triggering the 2005 Nias Earthquake Induced by the 2004 Sumatra-Andaman Earthquake, by K. L. H. Hughes and T. Masterlark; #90087 (2009).
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The Role of Fluids in Triggering the 2005 Nias Previous HitEarthquakeNext Hit Induced by the 2004 Sumatra-Andaman Previous HitEarthquakeNext Hit

K. L. H. Hughes and T. Masterlark
University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487

The 26 December 2004 M9.3 Sumatra-Andaman and the 28 March 2005 M8.7 Nias earthquakes ruptured adjacent portions of the plate boundary interface in the Sumatra-Andaman subduction zone. The spatial and temporal proximity of these events suggests that the earthquakes were mechanically coupled. The M9.3 Previous HitearthquakeNext Hit ruptured an approximately 1200-km-long segment of the plate boundary interface, from near Simeulue Island northward through the Andaman Islands. About three months later, the M8.7 Previous HitearthquakeNext Hit ruptured an adjacent segment, just to the south of the M9.3 rupture. The spatiotemporal separation of the second Previous HitearthquakeNext Hit suggests a poroelastic delay and triggering mechanism.

We propose a two-step process to explain the M8.7 rupture as a suspended along-strike migration of the M9.3 rupture. First, the M9.3 Previous HitearthquakeNext Hit on the plate interface was the initial trigger. Second, it produced a pulse of pore pressure that migrated laterally along the plate interface of the Sunda trench. This pore pressure pulse disturbed the stability of the segment south of the M9.3 rupture, leading to failure of the M8.7 segment. Preliminary numerical results suggest the presence of a fluid-rich permeable subducting oceanic crust sandwiched between the less permeable mantle regions of the down-going slab and overriding wedge. The isolated and permeable oceanic crust favors alongstrike migration of excess coseismic pore pressure. This deep lateral migration of pore pressure along the subducting oceanic crust explains the delayed triggering at the hypocenter of the M8.7 Previous HitearthquakeTop.

AAPG Search and Discover Article #90087 © 2008 AAPG/SEG Student Expo, Houston, Texas