Emerged Coral Reefs Record Holocene Low-Angle Normal Fault Earthquakes
Journal
Geophysical Research Letters
Journal Volume
47
Journal Issue
20
Pages
-
Date Issued
2020
Author(s)
Abstract
Abstract Low‐angle normal faults (LANFs; dip <30°) accommodate kilometers of crustal extension, yet it remains unclear whether these faults can host large earthquakes or if they predominantly creep aseismically. Most active LANFs typically slip at rates of <3 mm/year. Here, we report U‐Th ages from a series of distinct levels of formerly shallow‐living corals killed by uplift‐induced emergence of the footwall of one of the world's fastest‐slipping LANFs, the Mai'iu fault in Papua New Guinea, which slips at rates of 8–12 mm/year. Coral ages and coastal morphology indicate punctuated episodic uplift events consistent with seismic slip on the Mai'iu fault. Maximum episodic uplift increments of 0.5–1.8 m imply earthquakes of M w > 7. We present the first coral paleoseismological record of normal fault earthquakes, which constrain the timing and surface uplift patterns of multiple LANF seismic cycles and confirm that LANFs can slip in large ( M w > 7) earthquakes.
Type
journal article
