Abstract
Analyses of two recent earthquakes of great magnitude show how complex the breaking of the oceanic lithosphere can be, how it is linked to earlier great events and how it triggers seismicity worldwide. See Letters p.240, p.245 & p.250 On 11 April 2012, two of the largest strike-slip earthquakes ever recorded — at magnitudes of 8.7 and 8.2 — occurred in the northeastern Indian Ocean, a few hundred kilometres off the coast of Sumatra. Three groups now report the analysis of seismic data from the days and months before and after these events, as well as the events themselves. Matthias Delescluse and co-authors show that these earthquakes are part of the ongoing boost of intraplate deformation between India and Australia that followed the Aceh 2004 and Nias 2005 megathrust earthquakes. They conclude that the Australian plate, driven by slab-pull forces at the Sunda trench, is gradually detaching from the Indian plate. Han Yue and colleagues show that the 11 April event involved a complex four-fault rupture lasting several minutes, followed two hours later by a magnitude-8.2 aftershock. These great ruptures on a lattice of strike-slip faults that extends through the crust and into the upper mantle represent large lithospheric deformation that may eventually create a localized boundary between the Indian and Australian plates. Fred Pollitz and colleagues show that, in the six days following 11 April, the global rate of remote earthquakes with magnitudes greater than 5.5 increased nearly fivefold, and events up to magnitude 7 seem to have been triggered. The unprecedented delayed triggering power of this earthquake may arise from its strike-slip source geometry, or because it struck at a time of an unusually low global earthquake rate and increased the number of nucleation sites that were very close to failure.
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