Abstract
AbstractTwo repeating compensated linear vector dipole (CLVD) earthquakes occurred in 2009 and 2017 on the Kermadec Ridge near the Curtis submarine volcano. The tsunami and seismic waveforms of both events are almost identical. Simulated tsunami and seismic waveforms are compared with observations of the 2017 event to estimate the location and geometry of the source. A CLVD source model at 8–14 km depth is consistent with the global CMT solution but generates no tsunami. The tsunami waveforms can be well reproduced if the source model is about 1.5 km deep. However, a seismic source at this depth is not consistent with the observed seismic waves. This suggests that two sources were involved with different depths. The main, shallow, tsunami source could be due to hydrofracturing of heated water in a shallow sediment layer triggered by a deeper earthquake.
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