Abstract. A seismic swarm lasting over two years occurred near the village of Neshkan, Chukotka, far northeastern Russia, beginning with a ML, 4.2 (4.1 mb) earthquake on 9 December 2002. The swarm generated considerable anxiety among the local populace and authorities. Two temporary seismic stations were deployed during the latter part of September 2003, and recorded over 150 events with magnitudes up to 3.0. Eighteen locatable events appear to form a northeast striking linear trend, parallel to other seismicity trends in Chukotka, extending 20 km to the southwest from the village. We interpret this trend as a previously unknown fault. A small pond located ~1 km west of the village drained and some apparent surface deformation was observed over the course of the earthquake sequence. Relocation of historic seismicity in the region shows that a magnitude 6.0 in 1996 may have ruptured an adjacent fault segment. Other, less well located but larger, teleseismic events earlier in the 20th century may also have occurred on or near this fault. The seismicity is consistent a proposed region of transtension along the northern boundary of a Bering plate.
Abstract. New field work, combined with analysis of high-resolution aerial photographs, digital elevation models, and satellite imagery, has identified an
active fault that is traceable for ∼90 km across the Seymchan Basin
and is part of the Ulakhan fault system, which is believed to form the
Okhotsk–North America plate boundary. Age dating of alluvial fan sediments
in a channel system that is disturbed by fault activity suggests the current
scarp is a result of a series of large earthquakes (≥Mw 7.5)
that have occurred since 11.6±2.7 ka. A possible channel feature offset
by 62±4 m associated with these sediments yields a slip rate of 5.3±1.3 mm yr−1, in broad agreement with rates suggested from global
plate tectonics. Our results clearly identify the Ulakhan fault as the
Okhotsk–North America plate boundary and show that tectonic strain release
is strongly concentrated on the boundaries of Okhotsk. In light of our
results, the likelihood of recurrence of Mw 7.5 earthquakes is
high, suggesting a previously underestimated seismic hazard across the
region.
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