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Instituto de Geofísica, UNAM
Ciudad
Universitaria
Mexico, D. F. 04510
(J.Y., L.Q., Z.J.)
CICESE
Earth Science Division
Km 107 Carretera
Tijuana-Ensenada
Baja California, Mexico
(C.J.R.)
The analysis of arrival times indicates that the focus of the 15 June 1999
(20:42 UTC; 6.3 mb; 6.5 Ms; 7.0
Mw) Puebla, Mexico, earthquake is located at 18.15° N
and 97.52° W and is 68 km deep in the contact region between the
continental American and the Cocos subducting plate. First-motion data and
regional and teleseismic waveform modeling indicate that the main rupture
occurred as normal faulting along a fault striking N64° W and dipping
approximately 42° toward the north-northeast. The aftershock activity,
though scarce, is concentrated mainly toward the west of the mainshock. Three
successive subevents are necessary to fit observed and synthetic waveforms.
The location in space and time of subevents indicates that the rupture started
as a small release at 76 km deep and then propagated toward the northwest
releasing most of the seismic energy at 73 km deep. Teleseismic spectral
analysis indicates that the total seismic moment release was 2.0 x
1019 N-m, and the mainshock fault length is of the order of 18 km
with a stress drop of 15 bars. The source-time function consisted of three
sources with a total duration of 10 sec. Recorded acceleration amplitudes of
the mainshock show a clear enhancement that can be up to eight times higher
toward the northwest of the epicenter in the frequency range from 0.06 Hz to
6.0 Hz, compared with the opposite direction. The distribution of reported
seismic intensity also shows this feature. The directivity effect cannot be
fully explained by the orientation of the fault, neither by the rupture
propagation direction; therefore, we investigate the possibility that the
directivity could be due to a regional propagation effect by analyzing the Lg
coda decay of the mainshock. The average frequency-dependent
QLg quality factor for the vertical component in the
frequency range from 0.2 Hz to 2 Hz was QLg(f) =
200 ± 12f 0.60±0.17 and
QLg(f) = 202 ± 7f
0.53±0.09 for paths toward the northwest and southeast of
the epicenter, respectively. The resulting average factor
Qo and
do not show significant azimuthal
fluctuations. Therefore, variations of crustal attenuation properties cannot
explain the notable extent of felt area and observed damage northwest of the
epicenter. Probably the presence to the north of the Transmexican Volcanic
Belt has played an important role in the enhancement of low-frequency seismic
signals.
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