Imbalanced moment release within subducting plates during initial
bending and unbending
Abstract
Internal deformation within the downgoing plate in subduction zones to
accommodate the bending of the plate as it starts to subduct is
reflected in widespread intraplate seismicity. This seismicity,
extending from the outer rise and outer trench slope, down to
intermediate depths within the slab, is dominated by the combination of
both normal- and thrust-faulting earthquakes reflecting the accumulation
and recovery of down-dip curvature. In the idealised case, where all
internal deformation is recovered and slabs descend as a straight plate
into the deeper mantle, we might expect the seismic moment released in
both extension and compression to balance. However, a number of factors
may complicate this: the thermal, compositional, and rheological
evolution of the slab as it subducts, changes in the proportion of
deformation accommodated seismically, and whether the slab undergoes any
permanent deformation (e.g., slab necking). Here, we assess earthquake
moment release in intraslab settings around the world, focusing on those
subduction systems with relatively simple slab geometries. Whilst moment
balances for individual regions are often heavily dependent on extreme
large-magnitude events, considering the combination of numerous regions
around the western Pacific and eastern Indian Ocean indicates that
substantially more deformation is accommodated seismically during
bending than during unbending, and that in both settings, significantly
more moment release reflects down-dip extension than down-dip
compression. This suggests that, although the location of seismicity is
clearly related to changes in slab curvature, there is a component of
permanent, unrecovered down-dip extension in many subducting slabs.