Abstract
Mw 7.6 and Mw 7.4 earthquakes occurred 16 h apart on April 12 and April 13, 2014, at depths of 15 km and 35 km, respectively, southwest of Makira Island (San Cristobal) in the Solomon Islands. We study the source mechanisms to investigate the interrelation between the two events, and to investigate why the Solomon Islands have a historically high rate of doublet earthquakes. Teleseismic P waveform data for both events were used to obtain the slip distributions for the two earthquakes by a finite fault slip inversion method. The Mw 7.6 event is an east–west left-lateral strike slip, where the maximum slip is observed 8–24 km east of the hypocenter. The Mw 7.4 earthquake is a thrust event with north and south-dipping nodal planes. The fault plane is not clear from the aftershock distribution, but the north-dipping plane considered to be the likely fault plane because of the simpler slip distribution compared to the south-dipping plane. The static Coulomb failure stress changes caused by the first earthquake were calculated in the region of the second earthquake. The results show that there was a + 48.59 kPa change at the hypocenter for the assumed north-dipping plane and + 18.24 kPa for the assumed south-dipping plane of the Mw 7.4 event. The temporal pattern of aftershocks shows a possible rate increase of stress prior to the occurrence of the Mw 7.4 events, which may also contribute to the triggering of the second event by static Coulomb Stress changes. We propose a model that supports the geological complexity of the region that may encourage such doublet events.Graphical
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