Abstract

An Mw 7.8 tsunami earthquake ruptured the shallow part of the Mentawai megathrust on 25 October 2010 and generated a large tsunami that hit the Mentawai Islands. The earthquake continued a partial rupture sequence of the 2007 Mw 8.5 and 7.9 Bengkulu earthquake and the 2008 Mw 7.2 North Pagai earthquake. The aftershock activity gives the opportunity to investigate the geometry of the subduction interface, which is critical to understanding the propagation and termination of a large earthquake. However, it is necessary to have a precise location and mechanism of the aftershock distribution to clearly image the fault geometry. In this preliminary study, we have applied the Cut-and-Paste (CAP) focal mechanism inversion method to 20 aftershocks (M ≥ 4.9) of the 2010 Mentawai earthquake. The seismic waveforms recorded by the BMKG broadband seismic network on the regional distance were used in the inversion. They successfully obtained ten focal mechanisms more than that provided in the GCMT catalog. The result exhibits a distinctly different thrust and normal faulting aftershocks activity. The thrust faulting aftershocks are mainly distributed in the downdip of the Mentawai 2010 mainshock rupture, indicating the stresses that have not been released during the mainshock. In the shallow region near the trench, the aftershocks are dominated by a normal faulting mechanism which shows the tensile stress caused by the bending of the subducting plate.

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