Abstract

The Colombia–Ecuador subduction zone is an exceptional natural laboratory to study the seismic cycle associated with large and great subduction earthquakes. Since the great 1906 Mw = 8.6 Colombia–Ecuador earthquake, four large Mw > 7.5 megathrust earthquakes occurred within the 1906 rupture area, releasing altogether a cumulative seismic moment of ∼35% of the 1906 seismic moment. We take advantage of newly released seismic catalogs and global positioning system (GPS) data at the scale of the Colombia–Ecuador subduction zone to balance the moment deficit that is building up on the megathrust interface during the interseismic period with the seismic and aseismic moments released by transient slip episodes. Assuming a steady-state interseismic loading, we found that the seismic moment released by the 2016 Mw = 7.8 Pedernales earthquake is about half of the moment deficit buildup since 1942, suggesting that the Pedernales segment was mature to host that seismic event and its postseismic afterslip. In the aftermath of the 2016 event, the asperities that broke in 1958 and 1979 both appears to be mature to host a large Mw > 7.5 earthquakes if they break in two individual seismic events, or an Mw∼7.8–8.0 earthquake if they break simultaneously. The analysis of our interseismic-coupling map suggests that the great 1906 Colombia–Ecuador earthquake could have ruptured a segment of 400 km-long bounded by two 80 km wide creeping segments that coincide with the entrance into the subduction of the Carnegie ridge in Ecuador and the Yaquina Graben in Colombia. These creeping segments share similar frictional properties and may both behave as strong seismic barriers able to stop ruptures associated with great events like in 1906. Smaller creeping segments are imaged within the 1906 rupture area and are located at the extremities of the large 1942, 1958, 1979, and 2016 seismic ruptures. Finally, assuming that the frequency–magnitude distribution of megathrust seismicity follows the Gutenberg–Richter law and considering that 50% of the transient slip on the megathrust is aseismic, we found that the maximum magnitude subduction earthquake that can affect this subduction zone has a moment magnitude equivalent to Mw ∼8.8 with a recurrence time of 1,400 years. No similar magnitude event has yet been observed in that region.

Highlights

  • The Colombia–Ecuador subduction zone extends about 900 km, measured along the trench axis, from the Gulf of Guayaquil (3°S) in South Ecuador to Buenavantura (4°N) in Colombia (Figure 1)

  • Considering the 1-sigma error uncertainties of the global positioning system (GPS) components and solutions with a reduced Chi-square χr2

  • Further north in Colombia, between the Sanquianga Peninsula and Buenaventura, it is less clear whether there are two 50 km-wide asperities located between the slab depths of 20 and 50 km or if the coupling is much higher on a large asperity that extends diagonally from about 10 km depth offshore the Sanquianga Peninsula to 40 km depth offshore Buenaventura

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Summary

Introduction

The Colombia–Ecuador subduction zone extends about 900 km, measured along the trench axis, from the Gulf of Guayaquil (3°S) in South Ecuador to Buenavantura (4°N) in Colombia (Figure 1) This subduction segment has experienced the great (Mw > 8.5) 1906 Colombia–Ecuador megathrust earthquake; many uncertainties remain on its exact moment magnitude that fluctuates from 8.5 to 9.0 in the scientific literature and on its rupture length that is proposed between 300 and 500 km long (Kanamori and McNally, 1982; Kelleher, 1972; Mendoza and Dewey, 1984). The occurrence of the 2016 event naturally raises the question about the beginning of a new seismic sequence in that region

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