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Seismological analysis of the two earthquakes that devastated southern Turkey

Seismological analysis of the two earthquakes that devastated southern Turkey
Summary of the study region. The yellow stars are the relocated epicenters of the MW 7.9 and MW 7.6 earthquakes. The dots are the relocated aftershocks (M聽鈮ヂ1.1) from 2023鈥02鈥06 01:17:32 (UTC) to 2023-02-16 21:35:55 (UTC) (after Melgar et聽al.,聽2023). The blue beachballs are the Global Centroid Moment Tensor solutions (Dziewonski et聽al.,聽1981; Ekstr枚m et聽al.,聽2012) and the gray beachballs are the focal mechanisms determined by the AFAD (AFAD Focal Mechanism Solution,聽2023) during the 2023 earthquake sequence. The active faults are from Emre et聽al.聽(2018), including the East Anatolian Fault (EAF) Zone (EAFZ), S眉rg眉 Fault Zone (SFZ), and Narl谋da臒 fault zone (NFZ). The square markers locate major provinces and towns. The white star is the epicenter of the 2020 MW 6.7 Do臒anyol鈥揝ivrice earthquake (Taymaz et聽al.,聽2021). The circles are the epicenters of the historical earthquakes (Ambraseys,聽1989; Ambraseys & Jackson,聽1998). The basemap tiles (terrain) including the administrative boundaries are provided by Stamen Design (under CC BY 3.0 license) and OpenStreetMap (under ODbL license). The inset map shows the boundaries between Aegean Sea (AS), African (AF), Anatolian (AT), Arabian (AR), and Eurasian (EU) plates (Bird,聽2003). The arrows denote the relative motion of the EAF and the North Anatolian Fault. The square box outlines the map extent of this figure. Credit: Geophysical Research Letters (2023). DOI: 10.1029/2023GL103480

On February 6, 2023, two major earthquakes with moment magnitudes of 7.9 and 7.6 occurred in southeastern T眉rkiye, near the Syria-T眉rkiye border. The two major earthquakes were close in time and space and can be considered twins. The shaking from the earthquakes caused significant damage to buildings, roads, and people.

The source areas of the two earthquakes are where the Anatolian, Arabian, and African plates meet, developing a of faults with bends, steps, and branches. However, how these fault networks promote and halt growth in actual earthquakes has been elucidated.

A new study published in Geophysical Research Letters analyzed the source processes of the 2023 T眉rkiye-Syria twin earthquakes and revealed a hierarchical rupture growth through a complex network of faults. Particularly, researchers found that the first rupture apparently propagated backward, changing the rupture direction like a boomerang as the rupture grew from a minor fault, which branched sharply from the main fault to a larger-scale rupture at the main fault.

In both the earthquakes, the rupture growth was partially at supershear speed. In the second earthquake, fault bending promoted fast rupture growth but abruptly stopped the rupture.

This study revealed that a geometrically complex network controlled the earthquake size and rupture propagation speed and direction, leading to multiscale rupture growth from small- to large-scale rupture episodes.

The new findings of the 2023 earthquake doublet display the irregular rupture evolution and diverse triggering behaviors in a single event and across the earthquake sequence, providing critical inputs in understanding earthquake-rupture dynamics and for better assessing future earthquakes.

More information: Ryo Okuwaki et al, Multi鈥怱cale Rupture Growth With Alternating Directions in a Complex Fault Network During the 2023 South鈥怑astern T眉rkiye and Syria Earthquake Doublet, Geophysical Research Letters (2023).

Journal information: Geophysical Research Letters

Provided by University of Tsukuba

Citation: Seismological analysis of the two earthquakes that devastated southern Turkey (2023, June 26) retrieved 27 June 2025 from /news/2023-06-seismological-analysis-earthquakes-devastated-southern.html
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