Published March 2012 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Temporal variations of non-volcanic tremor (NVT) locations in the Mexican subduction zone: Finding the NVT sweet spot

Abstract

Epicentral locations of non-volcanic tremors (NVT) in the Mexican subduction zone are determined from the peak of the energy spatial distribution and examined over time. NVT is found to occur persistently at a distance of ∼215 km from the trench, which we term the "Sweet Spot" because this region probably has the proper conditions (i.e., temperature, pressure, and fluid content) for the NVT to occur with minimum shear slip. High-energy NVT episodes are also observed every few months, extending ∼190 km to ∼220 km from the trench with durations of a few weeks. During the 2006 slow slip event (SSE) the duration and the recurrence rate of the NVT episodes increased. Low-energy episodes were also observed, independent from the high-energy episodes, ∼150 km to ∼190 km from the trench during the 2006 SSE. Both the high and low energy episodes were made up of many individual NVT's that had a range of energy-release-rates. However, the highest energy-release-rates of the high-energy episodes were consistently double those of the low-energy episodes and the persistent activity at the Sweet Spot. We suggest that all of the high-energy episodes are evidence of small, short repeat interval SSE. Given this model, the increased recurrence rate of the high-energy NVT episodes during the 2006 long-term SSE implies that short-term SSE's also increase during the SSE and are therefore triggered by the SSE.

Additional Information

© 2012 by the American Geophysical Union. Issue Online: 13 March 2012; Version of Record online: 13 March 2012; Manuscript accepted: 30 January 2012; Manuscript revised: 27 January 2012; Manuscript received: 12 October 2011. We would like to thank Guillermo González for preparing Animation S1 in the auxiliary material. This study was supported by PAPIIT IN110611, CONACYT 84544, SEP-CONACYT-ANUIES-ECOS M06-U02, I832 (G-GAP) ANR, ANR-06-CEXC-005 (COHERSIS), and ERC Advanced 227507 "WHISPER" grants. The MASE experiment of the Caltech Tectonics Observatory was funded by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. Support and equipment for MASE were also provided by the Center for Embedded Network Sensing (CENS) at UCLA, NSF award EAR0609707.

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Published - 2011GC003916.pdf

Supplemental Material - ggge2143-sup-0001-readme.txt

Supplemental Material - ggge2143-sup-0002-ms01.avi

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