Relation between oceanic plate structure, patterns of interplate locking
and microseismicity in the 1922 Atacama Seismic Gap
Abstract
We deployed a dense geodetic and seismological network in the Atacama
seismic gap in Chile. We derive a microseismicity catalog of
>30,000 events, time series from 70 GNSS stations, and
apply a transdimensional Bayesian inversion to estimate interplate
locking degree. We identify two highly locked regions of different sizes
whose geometries appear to control seismicity patterns. Interface
seismicity concentrates beneath the coastline just downdip of the
highest locking. A region of lower interplate locking around 27.5ºS
coincides with higher seismicity levels, a high number of repeating
earthquakes and events extending further towards the trench. Having
shown numerous signs of aseismic deformation (slow-slip events and
earthquake swarms), this area is situated where the Copiapó Ridge is
subducted. While these findings suggest that the structure of the
downgoing oceanic plate prescribes patterns of interplate locking and
seismicity, we note that the Taltal Ridge further north lacks a similar
signature.