ResearchSpace

Unexpectedly frequent occurrence of very small repeating earthquakes (5.1=Mw=3.6) in a South African gold mine: Implications for monitoring intraplate faults

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Naoi, M
dc.contributor.author Nakatani, M
dc.contributor.author Igarashi, T
dc.contributor.author Otsuki, K
dc.contributor.author Yabe, Y
dc.contributor.author Kgarume, Thabang E
dc.contributor.author Murakami, O
dc.contributor.author Masakale, T
dc.contributor.author Ribeiro, L
dc.contributor.author Ward, AK
dc.contributor.author Moriya, K
dc.contributor.author Kawakata, H
dc.contributor.author Nakao, S
dc.contributor.author Durrheim, RJ
dc.contributor.author Ogasawara, H
dc.date.accessioned 2016-10-13T12:59:30Z
dc.date.available 2016-10-13T12:59:30Z
dc.date.issued 2015-12
dc.identifier.citation Naoi, M., Nakatani, M., Igarashi, T., Kgarume, T.E., Durrheim, R.J., et al., Unexpectedly frequent occurrence of very small repeating earthquakes (5.1=Mw=3.6) in a South African gold mine: Implications for monitoring intraplate faults. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 120(12), 8478–8493, DOI: 10.1002/2015JB012447 en_US
dc.identifier.issn 0148-0227
dc.identifier.uri http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2015JB012447/abstract
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8811
dc.description Copyright: 2015 American Geophysical Union en_US
dc.description.abstract The authors observed very small repeating earthquakes with -5.1 = Mw = -3.6 on a geological fault at 1 km depth in a gold mine in South Africa. Of the 851 acoustic emissions that occurred on the fault during the 2 month analysis period, 45% were identified as repeaters on the basis of waveform similarity and relative locations. They occurred steadily at the same location with similar magnitudes, analogous to repeaters at plate boundaries, suggesting that they are repeat ruptures of the same asperity loaded by the surrounding aseismic slip (background creep). Application of the Nadeau and Johnson (1998) empirical formula (NJ formula), which relates the amount of background creep and repeater activity and is well established for plate boundary faults, to the present case yielded an impossibly large estimate of the background creep. This means that the presently studied repeaters were produced more efficiently, for a given amount of background creep, than expected from the NJ formula. When combined with an independently estimated average stress drop of 16 MPa, which is not particularly high, it suggests that the small asperities of the presently studied repeaters had a high seismic coupling (almost unity), in contrast to one physical interpretation of the plate boundary repeaters. The productivity of such repeaters, per unit background creep, is expected to increase strongly as smaller repeaters are considered ( Mo -1/3 as opposed to Mo -1/6 of the NJ formula), which may be usable to estimate very slow creep that may occur on intraplate faults. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher American Geophysical Union en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries Workflow;16452
dc.subject Acoustic Emissions en_US
dc.subject Coseismic Stress Drops en_US
dc.subject Earthquake en_US
dc.subject Intraplate earthquake en_US
dc.subject South African gold mine en_US
dc.title Unexpectedly frequent occurrence of very small repeating earthquakes (5.1=Mw=3.6) in a South African gold mine: Implications for monitoring intraplate faults en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dc.identifier.apacitation Naoi, M., Nakatani, M., Igarashi, T., Otsuki, K., Yabe, Y., Kgarume, T. E., ... Ogasawara, H. (2015). Unexpectedly frequent occurrence of very small repeating earthquakes (5.1=Mw=3.6) in a South African gold mine: Implications for monitoring intraplate faults. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8811 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Naoi, M, M Nakatani, T Igarashi, K Otsuki, Y Yabe, Thabang E Kgarume, O Murakami, et al "Unexpectedly frequent occurrence of very small repeating earthquakes (5.1=Mw=3.6) in a South African gold mine: Implications for monitoring intraplate faults." (2015) http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8811 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Naoi M, Nakatani M, Igarashi T, Otsuki K, Yabe Y, Kgarume TE, et al. Unexpectedly frequent occurrence of very small repeating earthquakes (5.1=Mw=3.6) in a South African gold mine: Implications for monitoring intraplate faults. 2015; http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8811. en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Article AU - Naoi, M AU - Nakatani, M AU - Igarashi, T AU - Otsuki, K AU - Yabe, Y AU - Kgarume, Thabang E AU - Murakami, O AU - Masakale, T AU - Ribeiro, L AU - Ward, AK AU - Moriya, K AU - Kawakata, H AU - Nakao, S AU - Durrheim, RJ AU - Ogasawara, H AB - The authors observed very small repeating earthquakes with -5.1 = Mw = -3.6 on a geological fault at 1 km depth in a gold mine in South Africa. Of the 851 acoustic emissions that occurred on the fault during the 2 month analysis period, 45% were identified as repeaters on the basis of waveform similarity and relative locations. They occurred steadily at the same location with similar magnitudes, analogous to repeaters at plate boundaries, suggesting that they are repeat ruptures of the same asperity loaded by the surrounding aseismic slip (background creep). Application of the Nadeau and Johnson (1998) empirical formula (NJ formula), which relates the amount of background creep and repeater activity and is well established for plate boundary faults, to the present case yielded an impossibly large estimate of the background creep. This means that the presently studied repeaters were produced more efficiently, for a given amount of background creep, than expected from the NJ formula. When combined with an independently estimated average stress drop of 16 MPa, which is not particularly high, it suggests that the small asperities of the presently studied repeaters had a high seismic coupling (almost unity), in contrast to one physical interpretation of the plate boundary repeaters. The productivity of such repeaters, per unit background creep, is expected to increase strongly as smaller repeaters are considered ( Mo -1/3 as opposed to Mo -1/6 of the NJ formula), which may be usable to estimate very slow creep that may occur on intraplate faults. DA - 2015-12 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Acoustic Emissions KW - Coseismic Stress Drops KW - Earthquake KW - Intraplate earthquake KW - South African gold mine LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2015 SM - 0148-0227 T1 - Unexpectedly frequent occurrence of very small repeating earthquakes (5.1=Mw=3.6) in a South African gold mine: Implications for monitoring intraplate faults TI - Unexpectedly frequent occurrence of very small repeating earthquakes (5.1=Mw=3.6) in a South African gold mine: Implications for monitoring intraplate faults UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8811 ER - en_ZA


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record