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1 U.S. Geological Survey
Central Region Geologic Hazards
Team
P. O. Box 25046
Denver, Colorado 80225
Pre-2002 tectonic loading and Coulomb stress transfer are modeled along the
rupture zone of the M 7.9 Denali fault earthquake (DFE) and on
adjacent segments of the right-lateral DenaliTotschunda fault system in
central Alaska, using a three-dimensional boundary-element program. The segments
modeled closely follow, for about 95°, the arc of a circle of radius 375 km
centered on an inferred asperity near the northeastern end of the intersection
of the Patton Bay fault with the Alaskan megathrust under Prince William Sound.
The loading model includes slip of 6 mm/yr below 12 km along the fault system,
consistent with rotation of the Wrangell block about the asperity at a rate of
about 1°/m.y. as well as slip of the Pacific plate at 5 cm/yr at depth
along the FairweatherQueen Charlotte transform fault system and on the
Alaska megathrust. The model is consistent with most available pre-2002 Global
Positioning System (GPS) displacement rate data. Coulomb stresses
induced on the DenaliTotschunda fault system (locked above 12 km) by slip
at depth and by transfer from the M 9.2 Prince William Sound earthquake
of 1964 dominated the changing Coulomb stress distribution along the fault. The
combination of loading (
7085%) and coseismic stress transfer from
the great 1964 earthquake (
1530%) were the principal post-1900
stress factors building toward strike-slip failure of the northern Denali and
Totschunda segments in the M 7.9 earthquake of November 2002. Postseismic
stresses transferred from the 1964 earthquake may also have been a significant
factor. The M 7.27.4 Delta River earthquake of 1912
(Carver et al., 2004)
may have delayed or advanced the timing of the DFE, depending on the
details and location of its rupture. The initial subevent of the 2002
DFE earthquake was on the 40-km Susitna Glacier thrust fault at the
western end of the Denali fault rupture. The Coulomb stress transferred from the
1964 earthquake moved the Susitna Glacier thrust fault uniformly away from
thrust failure by about 100 kPa. The initiation of the Denali fault earthquake
was advanced by transfer of 3050 kPa of positive Coulomb stress to the
Susitna Glacier fault
(Anderson and Ji, 2003) by the
nearby M 6.7 Nenana Mountain foreshock of 23 October 2002. The regional
tectonic loading model used here suggests that the Semidi (Alaska Peninsula)
segment of the megathrust that ruptured in 1938 (M 8.2) may be reloaded
and approaching failure.
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