Abstract

AbstractEarthquakes that rupture several faults occur frequently within the shallow lithosphere but are rarely observed for intermediate‐depth events (70–300 km). On 29 November 2007, the Mw7.4 Martinique earthquake struck the Lesser Antilles Island Arc near the deep end of the Wadati‐Benioff‐Zone. The sparse regional seismic network of 2007 previously hampered a detailed examination of this unusually complex event. Here, we combine seismic data from different studies with regional moment tensor inversion results and 3D full‐waveform modeling. We show that the earthquake is a doublet consisting of dip‐slip and strike‐slip motion along two oblique structures, both activated under extensional stress along the strike of the slab. Comparison with tectonic reconstructions suggests that the earthquake ruptured along a re‐activated ridge‐transform segment of the subducted Proto‐Caribbean spreading ridge. The unprecedented resolution of the source process highlights the influence of pre‐existing structures on localizing slab deformation also at intermediate‐depth.

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