Published July 2025 | Version Published
Journal Article Open

The 28 March 2025 Mw 7.8 Myanmar Earthquake: Preliminary Analysis of an ∼480 km Long Intermittent Supershear Rupture

  • 1. ROR icon Southern University of Science and Technology
  • 2. ROR icon University of California, Santa Cruz
  • 3. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

On 28 March 2025, an M_w 7.8 shallow strike-slip earthquake ruptured ∼480 km of the 1200 km long Sagaing fault extending north–south across central Myanmar. This active right-lateral fault hosted six major earthquakes in the twentieth century and locates along the two largest cities of Myanmar, constituting a major seismic hazard. The rupture, constrained by finite-fault inversion of teleseismic body waves, backprojections of short-period P waves, and informed by initial Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar imagery of surface deformation has large slip of up to 7 m extending ∼85 km north of the epicenter near Mandalay, with patchy slip of 1–6 m distributed along ∼395 km to the south, with about 2 m near the capital Nay Pyi Taw. Rupture expanded at a supershear velocity of 5–6 km/s southward, during the ∼80 s rupture duration. Long-period point-source moment tensors indicate eastward dip of 48.5°–60°, and such dip is required to match the teleseismic P-wave first motions for the early large slip in the northern part of the rupture. Dip likely steepens along strike to the south, although resolving that will require detailed analysis of surface deformation. Southward directivity associated with the finiteness and supershear rupture velocity contributed to remote distant shaking damage in Thailand.

Copyright and License

Acknowledgement

The authors thank Shiqing Xu, Zhenxing Yao, Xiaofei Chen, and Xiaohua Xu for helpful discussions, Editor‐in‐Chief Keith Koper and an anonymous reviewer for their thoughtful comments and suggestions, which helped improve the article.

Funding

The work was supported in part by National Natural Science Foundation of China 42474077 (L. Y.) and National Science Foundation Grant EAR1802364 (T. L.).

Data Availability

Seismic recordings from global seismic stations we used were downloaded from the National Science Foundation (NSF) Seismological Facility for the Advancement of Geoscience (SAGE) Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology Data Management Center (IRIS‐DMC, http://ds.iris.edu/ds/nodes/dmc/). Strong‐motion data were downloaded from the Center for Engineering Strong‐Motion Data (CESMD; https://www.strongmotioncenter.org/). Earthquake source mechanisms are from the Global Centroid Moment Tensor (Global CMT) project (Ekström et al., 2012). Earthquake information is based on the catalogs of the National Earthquake Information Center (NEIC) at the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS, https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eventpage/us 7000pn9s/executive). The earthquake energy product query is available at https://ds.iris.edu/spud/eqenergy. All websites were last accessed in April 2024. Additional tables and figures are included in the supplemental material to this article.

Supplemental Material

tsr-2025021_supplement- pdf file

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tsr-2025021.1.pdf

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Additional details

Funding

National Natural Science Foundation of China
42474077
National Science Foundation
EAR-1802364

Dates

Available
2025-07-10
Published online

Caltech Custom Metadata

Caltech groups
Seismological Laboratory, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences (GPS)
Publication Status
Published