Prevailing Conditions for Dynamic Triggering in intraplate and
plate-boundary regions of the USA
Abstract
To facilitate identification of conditions that lead to the dynamic
triggering of seismic events as catalogs of these events keep growing,
we applied a machine-learning algorithm (decision tree) to a published
data set of known instances of dynamically triggered seismic tremor in
central California. To investigate the possible universality of our
findings and to further test the algorithm, we also applied it to new
observations, presented here, of potentially dynamically triggered
seismic activity in three intraplate regions: Raton Basin (CO),
Yellowstone, and central Utah. We report potential tremor or local
earthquake signals from here during the propagation of surface waves
from the 2012 M8.6 Sumatra earthquake. These surface waves also
triggered seismic activity along the western boundary of the North
American plate and did not trigger seismic activity in the central and
eastern USA. We report additional potential dynamic triggering in the
three aforementioned intraplate regions from an investigation of
seismograms from 37 additional large earthquakes, recorded between 2004
to 2017.
Our findings show that transient stresses generated by surface waves
from large earthquakes and arriving from favorable directions generally
lead to triggered tremor in seismically, volcanically, and
hydrothermally active regions like central California and possibly
Yellowstone. These stresses do not appear to be decisive factors for the
potentially dynamically triggered local earthquakes reported for the
Raton Basin and central Utah, while surface waves’ incidence angles do
appear to be important there.