Earth, Planets and Space (Jun 2022)

Outer trench slope extension to frontal wedge compression in a subducting plate

  • Emmy T. Chang,
  • Laetitia Mozziconacci

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40623-022-01664-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 74, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract The occurrence of faulting in subducting plates is a major process that changes the mechanical properties of the subducting lithosphere and carries surface materials into mantle wedges. Two ocean-bottom seismometer networks deployed on the frontal accretionary wedge of the northern Manila trench in 2005 and on the outer slope of the trench in 2006 were used to detect earthquakes in the subducting plate. All available P and S manually picked phases and the waveforms of 16 short-period, three-component stations were used. Relocation was performed using the double-difference method with differential times derived from the phase-picked data. Two intraplate earthquake sequences of small-to-moderate magnitudes in the northern Manila subduction system were investigated in this study. The results revealed distinct fault planes, but a contrasting seismogeny over the northern Manila Trench. The seismicity in the frontal wedge (as measured in 2005) was mainly contributed by a fluid overpressure sequence, whereas that in the incoming plate (as measured in 2006) was contributed by the aftershocks of an extensional faulting sequence. The obtained seismic velocity models and V p/V s ratios revealed that the overpressure was likely caused by high pore-fluid pressure within the shallow subduction zone. By using the near-field waveform inversion algorithm, we determined focal mechanism solutions for a few relatively large earthquakes. Through the use of data obtained from global seismic observations, we determined that stress transfer may be responsible for the seismic activity in the study area during the period of 2005–2006. In late 2005, the plate interface in the frontal wedge area was unlocked by the overpressure effect due to a thrusting-dominant sequence. This event changed the stress regime across the Manila Trench and triggered a normal fault extension at the outer trench slope in mid-2006. However, in the present study, a hybrid focal mechanism solution indicating reverse and strike–slip mechanisms was implemented, and it revealed that the plate interface locked again in late 2006. Graphical Abstract

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