Abstract Data from temporary seismographs installed immediately after the ML 6.3 Ormond earthquake of 1993 August 10 have been used to determine the nature of faulting which took place during the event. The rupture began at 37 km depth, within the mantle of the subducted Pacific plate, and aftershocks extended from near the base of the subducted crust to c. 20 km into the subducted mantle. Aftershocks in the mantle decayed exceptionally rapidly compared with those in the crust of the subducted plate. This may reflect a hotter, more ductile mantle and/or relatively homogeneous rupture within the mantle during the mainshock. Aftershocks within the mantle show a variety of thrusting mechanisms. Focal mechanisms of aftershocks within the subducted crust indicate that compression along strike dominates over slab pull, and that the down-dip stress has a similar magnitude to the vertical stress. This suggests that, at least after the Ormond earthquake, the tectonic stress coupled across the plate interface is rather low.
Keywords Ormond earthquake; subduction; aftershocks; focal mechanisms; plate coupling
New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 1998, Vol. 41: 179-185
0028-8306/98/4102-0179 $7.00/0 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand 1998
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