期刊论文详细信息
Frontiers in Earth Science
Active faulting of the Nanhe Fault and relation to the Anninghe Fault zone in the late Quaternary, eastern Tibetan Plateau
Earth Science
Like An1  Xing Yang2  Shao Liu2  Wei Zhang2  Chao Ma2  Yufa Liu2 
[1] Department of Geophysics, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan;Sichuan Earthquake Agency, Chengdu, China;
关键词: Anninghe Fault;    Nanhe Fault;    late Quaternary slip rate;    paleoseismology;    seismic hazard;    Tibetan Plateau;    Sichuan–Yunnan Block;   
DOI  :  10.3389/feart.2023.1086854
 received in 2022-11-01, accepted in 2023-01-18,  发布年份 2023
来源: Frontiers
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【 摘 要 】

Faults along the boundaries of active tectonic blocks are the main structures that are responsible for major earthquakes in mainland China. Investigating the geometric distribution, rupture behavior, and paleoseismic history of these faults is the prerequisite for constraining geodynamic models and regional seismic hazard analyses. The Nanhe Fault, located at the eastern boundary of the Sichuan–Yunnan Block near Mianning County, has been paid less attention so far due to insufficient historical records of major earthquakes. In this paper, we focused on the Nanhe Fault and conducted satellite imagery interpretation, field investigations, and trench excavations. Our findings indicate that the Nanhe Fault initiates north of Mianning County; the north segment of the fault is connected with the Anninghe Fault; and it extends for about 70 km south-westward and terminates southwest of Ermaga Village. The fault has been faulting in the late Late Pleistocene with a left-lateral strike-slip rate of 2.40–2.56 mm/yr, while in the late Holocene, the left-lateral strike-slip and vertical slip rates are 2.50–2.60 mm/yr and about 0.60 mm/yr, respectively. Three paleoseismic events (5373–4525 BC, AD 1193–1576, and AD 1496–1843) were identified by excavating trenches at the Nanhe Fault. A comparative analysis of paleoseismic events between the Nanhe and the Anninghe fault indicates that both faults may have induced cascade rupture or triggered earthquakes—such related events may have occurred in 1496–1627. Additionally, by comparing the kinematic relationship of the faults at the eastern boundary of the Sichuan–Yunnan Block, we propose that the Nanhe Fault takes part in strain partitioning along the boundary. This interpretation reasonably explains the loss of the sliding rate between the Anninghe and Zemuhe faults, which also supports the GPS inversion results, and the discontinuous deformation model for the eastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau.

【 授权许可】

Unknown   
Copyright © 2023 Ma, Liu, An, Yang, Liu and Zhang.

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