Seismological Research Letters; May/June 2008; v. 79; no. 3;
p. 469-477; DOI: 10.1785/gssrl.79.3.469
© 2008 Seismological Society of America
Focal Mechanisms in the Northeast New Madrid Seismic Zone
On 23 January 1812, an estimated M7–M8 earthquake occurred in the New
Madrid seismic zone. The New Madrid North fault (NMNF) has been proposed as
the location of this rupture. Based on the estimated size of this earthquake,
the rupture length of the fault plane would be expected to extend beyond the
microseismicity that defines the NMNF. Seismicity data from this area show
three alignments of earthquakes, running northeast from New Madrid, Missouri,
into western Kentucky and southern Illinois that may represent an extension of
the New Madrid seismic zone (NMSZ) and therefore alternative locations for the
23 January 1812 rupture. Earthquakes in the northeast NMSZ from June 1995 to
June 2006 were relocated using a velocity model of the Mississippi embayment
with appropriate depths to bedrock beneath seismic stations. Focal mechanisms
were generated for events on the northeast trending alignments. The results
show approximately half the focal mechanisms have a north-northeast-striking
nodal plane and a right-lateral, strike-slip component consistent with earlier
studies of the NMNF to the southwest. This shows that this part of the
northeast NMSZ is influenced by the same fault pattern and stress regime as
the NMNF, may be an extension of the NMSZ, and therefore alternate locations
of the 23 January 1812 rupture.
Copyright © 2009 by Seismological Society of America