Cascading and Multi-Segment Rupture of a Mw 5.3 Injection-Induced Earthquake
Description:
Rupture segmentation and propagating earthquake sequences are observed in major fault systems, however, their scalability to smaller fault systems is unclear. We investigated a 2011 earthquake sequence with a moderate magnitude mainshock (Mw 5.3) in the Trinidad zone, located in the Raton Basin on the Colorado-New Mexico border. The complexity of the 2011 earthquake sequence and broader evolution of seismicity from 2008-2022 was captured using machine-learning for initial earthquake detection with an aftershock array followed by automated template detection. The Mw 5.3 mainshock was likely the culmination of cascading failure with slip across multiple well-separated segments. The majority (92%) of aftershock waveforms clustered into seven distinct groups. The clusters are interpreted as slip asperities along multiple faults. The three southern clusters hosted foreshocks in the days to minutes prior to the mainshock, whereas the four northern clusters were inactive over the same period. The mainshock rupture initiated in the foreshock footprint and moved northeastward across the three southern clusters. Within an hour after the mainshock, seismicity was triggered on the four previously quiescent northern segments. The maximum slip patch from a previous geodetic inversion aligns with the third cluster along the northward rupture path. The ~5.5-6 km rupture length across the three southern clusters is consistent with empirical estimates (5-5.5 km) for a Mw 5.3 earthquake. The northern clusters filled a seismic gap between the two major earthquake sequences of the Trinidad zone, the 2011 Mw 5.3 and the 2001 MbLg 4.5 mainshock earthquake sequences. Seismicity in the Trinidad zone diminished from 2012-2016, and the earthquake rate from 2016-2020 is two orders of magnitude lower than that of the neighboring Tercio and Vermejo Park zones. The complexity of the 2011 Mw 5.3 earthquake sequence presents a challenge for accurate hazard assessment in fluid-injection settings where fault geometry is often unresolved until seismic reactivation and the strength of the crust can be locally modified by fluid-injection.
Session: Advances in Characterizing Seismic Hazard and Forecasting Risk in Hydrocarbon Systems
Type: Oral
Date: 4/18/2023
Presentation Time: 02:30 PM (local time)
Presenting Author: Margaret E. Glasgow
Student Presenter: No
Invited Presentation:
Authors
Margaret Glasgow Presenting Author Corresponding Author mglasgow@unm.edu University of New Mexico |
Brandon Schmandt bschmandt@unm.edu University of New Mexico |
Susan Bilek susan.bilek@nmt.edu New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology |
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Cascading and Multi-Segment Rupture of a Mw 5.3 Injection-Induced Earthquake
Category
Advances in Characterizing Seismic Hazard and Forecasting Risk in Hydrocarbon Systems