6 February 2016 | Quake Insight | Revised
The 5 Feb 2016 M=6.3 event struck at a depth of 20 km (12 mi) about 40 km (25 mi) east of the southern city of Tainan, with a population of 1.9 million. The earthquake was felt throughout Taiwan, and strongly shaking Tainan. A 17-story, 100-unit apartment building constructed before the strengthened building codes were imposed after the 1999 M=7.6 Chi-Chi quake, collapsed, as well as several other buildings.
Based on the focal mechanism, aftershocks, geology, and the distribution of shaking, the earthquake most likely involves slip on a blind thrust fault, so none of the major surface-cutting faults would appear to be involved. The most famous blind thrust events in California are the 1983 M=6.7 Coalinga, and 1994 M=6.7 Northridge, shocks. The Taiwan event is very similar in size, location, style, and shaking as the M=6.4 Jiashian earthquake in 2010; the two appear to abut, and so are almost certainly related.
A ‘blind thrust fault’ is one that does not cut the earth’s surface, and therefore is ‘blind’ to geologists. The fault (red at left) causes the overlying strata to be uplifted and warped into a fold, and so blind thrusts are often inferred from surface folds. Blind thrusts can produce M<7.5 quakes, and are a threat in southern and central California.
One can see the site of the 2010 M=6.4 shock in the same figure (from H. H. Huang, Y.-M. Wu, T.-L. Lin, W.-A. Chao, J. B. H. Shyu, C.-H. Han, and C.-H. Chang, TAO, 2011), with its approximate rupture area based on the extent of its aftershocks. The mainshocks are only 15 km (9 mi) apart, with the 2016 mainshock on the edge of the 2010 rupture, suggesting that the 2010 shock brought the site of the 2016 rupture closer to failure.
Today’s earthquake presages modifications to the seismic hazard map for Taiwan now underway by the Taiwan Earthquake Model group (TEM), an interdisciplinary community of earth scientists and engineers drawn from academia and industry. TEM is using the state-of-the-art open source modeling tool, Open Quake, developed by the Global Earthquake Model (GEM Foundation). TEM not only uses GEM’s tools, but has been a leading contributor to GEM science. Crucially, the TEM geologists have found new faults, re-evaluated older ones, and reassessed the amplification of seismic waves in the basins along western Taiwan.
One can see that the hazard in Tainan in the TEM map is much higher than in the preceding national map developed by the Central Geological Survey. The TEM map is preliminary, and no map or hazard model can forecast earthquake occurrence, and so the M=6.3 quake does not allow one to assess which model is best. But because the new model doubles the hazard in Tainan, and raises the hazard slightly at the M=6.3 epicenter, the 6 February 2016 earthquake lends support to its fidelity and utility.
Ross Stein and Volkan Sevilgen, Temblor
Data and acknowledgements: We are very grateful to Prof. Kuo Fong Ma (National Central University) for providing a wealth of preliminary findings. Data is from Taiwan Central Weather Bureau, Taiwan Earthquake Model, Taiwan Earthquake Research Center, Shyu et al. (2005), Huang et al. (2011), Ching et al. (2011), Dr. Shiann-Jong Lee (Academia Sinica), Prof. F. T. Wu (SUNY Binghamton), and Prof. Shinji Toda (Tohoku University), with translation of Taiwanese data by Dr. Jian Lin (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution).
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