Abstract

The ground-velocity recordings of the 20 September 1999, Chi-Chi, Taiwan earthquake recorded at stations near the ruptured fault trace show a simple, large-amplitude, and long-period pulse following the S wave, which is closely associated with the surface faulting and the rupture process of thrust faulting. The conspicuous pulse on the ground-velocity seismogram following the S -wave arrival, called the S 1 phase, is interpreted as the superposition of the rupture pulses that nucleate at an asperity near and underneath the station and propagate up-dip and laterally along the fault plane toward the surface stations. The arrival times of the S 1 phase and the onsets of the permanent displacement at stations near and along the ruptured fault trace increase with hypocentral distance, suggesting that the rupture of the Chi-Chi earthquake might have initiated at the hypocenter of the mainshock and propagated both upward and laterally from south to north. On the basis of the travel-time differences between the S 1 phase and the direct S wave at the stations near and along the ruptured fault trace, the rupture velocities varied from 2.28 to 2.69 km/sec, with an average rupture velocity of about 2.49 km/sec. The rupture velocities decreased from south to north.

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