Nature Communications (Sep 2023)

Complex multi-fault rupture and triggering during the 2023 earthquake doublet in southeastern Türkiye

  • Chengli Liu,
  • Thorne Lay,
  • Rongjiang Wang,
  • Tuncay Taymaz,
  • Zujun Xie,
  • Xiong Xiong,
  • Tahir Serkan Irmak,
  • Metin Kahraman,
  • Ceyhun Erman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41404-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Two major earthquakes (MW 7.8 and MW 7.7) ruptured left-lateral strike-slip faults of the East Anatolian Fault Zone (EAFZ) on February 6, 2023, causing >59,000 fatalities and ~$119B in damage in southeastern Türkiye and northwestern Syria. Here we derived kinematic rupture models for the two events by inverting extensive seismic and geodetic observations using complex 5-6 segment fault models constrained by satellite observations and relocated aftershocks. The larger event nucleated on a splay fault, and then propagated bilaterally ~350 km along the main EAFZ strand. The rupture speed varied from 2.5-4.5 km/s, and peak slip was ~8.1 m. 9-h later, the second event ruptured ~160 km along the curved northern EAFZ strand, with early bilateral supershear rupture velocity (>4 km/s) followed by a slower rupture speed (~3 km/s). Coulomb Failure stress increase imparted by the first event indicates plausible triggering of the doublet aftershock, along with loading of neighboring faults.