학술논문

A long source area of the 1906 Colombia–Ecuador earthquake estimated from observed tsunami waveforms
Document Type
article
Source
Earth, Planets and Space, Vol 69, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2017)
Subject
1906 Colombia–Ecuador earthquake
Slip distribution
Inverse analysis
Tsunami waveforms
Geography. Anthropology. Recreation
Geodesy
QB275-343
Geology
QE1-996.5
Language
English
ISSN
1880-5981
Abstract
Abstract The 1906 Colombia–Ecuador earthquake induced both strong seismic motions and a tsunami, the most destructive earthquake in the history of the Colombia–Ecuador subduction zone. The tsunami propagated across the Pacific Ocean, and its waveforms were observed at tide gauge stations in countries including Panama, Japan, and the USA. This study conducted slip inverse analysis for the 1906 earthquake using these waveforms. A digital dataset of observed tsunami waveforms at the Naos Island (Panama) and Honolulu (USA) tide gauge stations, where the tsunami was clearly observed, was first produced by consulting documents. Next, the two waveforms were applied in an inverse analysis as the target waveform. The results of this analysis indicated that the moment magnitude of the 1906 earthquake ranged from 8.3 to 8.6. Moreover, the dominant slip occurred in the northern part of the assumed source region near the coast of Colombia, where little significant seismicity has occurred, rather than in the southern part. The results also indicated that the source area, with significant slip, covered a long distance, including the southern, central, and northern parts of the region.