Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
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Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; June 1983; v. 73; no. 3; p. 813-829
© 1983 Seismological Society of America
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Rampart seismic zone of central Alaska

P. YI-FA HUANG* and N. N. BISWAS

GEOPHYSICAL INSTITUTE UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA, FAIRBANKS, ALASKA 99701

Abstract

This paper describes the characteristics of the Rampart seismic zone by means of the aftershock sequence of the Rampart earthquake (ML = 6.8) which occurred in central Alaska on 29 October 1968. The magnitudes of the aftershocks ranged from about 1.6 to 4.4 which yielded a b value of 0.96 ± 0.09. The locations of the aftershocks outline a NNE-SSW trending aftershock zone about 50 km long which coincides with the offset of the Kaltag fault from the Victoria Creek fault. The rupture zone dips steeply ({approx}80°) to the west and extends from the surface to a depth of about 10 km. Fault plane solutions for a group of selected aftershocks, which occurred over a period of 22 days after the main shock, show simultaneous occurrences of strike-slip and normal faults. A comparison of the trends in seismicity between the neighboring areas shows that the Rampart seismic zone lies outside the area of underthrusting of the lithospheric plate in southcentral and central Alaska. The seismic zone outlined by the aftershock sequence appears to represent the formation of an intraplate fracture caused by regional northwest compression.

Footnotes

* Present address: Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139.




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L. GEDNEY and J. N. DAVIES
Additional evidence for down-dip tension in the Pacific plate beneath central Alaska
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, October 1, 1986; 76(5): 1207 - 1214.
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