Limits of the seismogenic zone in the epicentral region of the 26 December 2004 great Sumatra-Andaman earthquake: Results from seismic refraction and wide-angle reflection surveys and thermal modeling
Frauke Klingelhoefer, Marc-Andr\'e Gutscher (DO, UEB), S. Ladage,, J.-X. Dessa (GEOAZUR), David Graindorge (DO, UEB), D. Franke, C. Andr\'e (DO,, UEB), Haryadi Permana, T. Yudistira (ITB), Ajay Chauhan (IPGP)

TL;DR
This study combines seismic surveys and thermal modeling to delineate the limits of the seismogenic zone in the Sumatra subduction zone, revealing the deep structure and thermal conditions influencing earthquake rupture.
Contribution
It provides detailed seismic imaging and thermal modeling of the Sumatra subduction zone, establishing the spatial limits of the seismogenic zone and its relation to the deep structure.
Findings
Seismic data reveal the deep structure of the source region.
The seismogenic zone begins approximately 530 km from the trench.
The downdip rupture limit occurs within 350-450°C temperature range.
Abstract
The 26 December 2004 Sumatra earthquake (Mw = 9.1) initiated around 30 km depth and ruptured 1300 km of the Indo-Australian Sunda plate boundary. During the Sumatra OBS (ocean bottom seismometer) survey, a wide angle seismic profile was acquired across the epicentral region. A seismic velocity model was obtained from combined travel time tomography and forward modeling. Together with reflection seismic data from the SeaCause II cruise, the deep structure of the source region of the great earthquake is revealed. Four to five kilometers of sediments overlie the oceanic crust at the trench, and the subducting slab can be imaged down to a depth of 35 km. We find a crystalline backstop 120 km from the trench axis, below the fore arc basin. A high velocity zone at the lower landward limit of the raycovered domain, at 22 km depth, marks a shallow continental Moho, 170 km from the trench. The…
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