Abstract

Between 1993 and 1998, the Hengill volcanic region in southwest Iceland was subject to a significant volcano-tectonic event which caused a total of 8 cm uplift and induced >90 thousand earthquakes, most of magnitude smaller than 2 ML and a small intrusion has been proposed as its cause. In this paper, we study fault activation around the uplift center to analyze whether the Coulomb stress change induced by such an intrusion would cause the observed crustal response. The locations of a subset of 12,000 micro-earthquakes are significantly improved by a double-difference relocation algorithm and the use of cross-correlation of waveforms to refine phase arrival times. The vast majority of seismic activity is scattered, but twenty-five (25) rectangular prisms, consisting of 11 to 363 earthquakes and 200 to 3000 m long, were identified and are interpreted as faults. Most of these faults are sub-vertical (within 5° from vertical) and only two faults dip at angles of 62° and 65°, respectively. Focal mechanism analysis of individual events was applied to estimate slip direction on these faults. Simulation of the Coulomb stress changes reveals that the stress changes would have been able to induce the observed fault movement on 22 of 25 faults. Discrepancies on the remaining faults are likely caused by uncertainties in the rake directions. Our results emphasize that the seismicity caused by a volume change in the crust is controlled by the interplay between the local stress field and the induced stresses.

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