4.6 Article

Revealing 60 years of Earthquake Swarms in the Southern Red Sea, Afar and the Gulf of Aden

Journal

FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/feart.2021.664673

Keywords

earthquake swarm; Afar depression; seismicity analysis; Red Sea-Gulf of Aden; rifting and breakup; volcanism; tectonics

Funding

  1. King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) [OSR-2015-CRG4-2643]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation [PP00P2_176869]
  3. NERC [NE/L013932]
  4. MiUR through PRIN grant [2017P9AT72]
  5. NEWTON-g project [801221]
  6. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [PP00P2_176869] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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Through a 60-year study of earthquake swarms in the southern Red Sea, Afar, and Gulf of Aden region, it was found that most earthquake swarms recur every few decades in the same area. The swarms are often associated with rifting events, including magmatic intrusions, surface faulting, and volcanic eruptions.
Earthquake swarms occur sporadically at divergent plate boundaries but their recurrence over multiple decades and relation to magmatic spreading activity remain poorly understood. Here we study more than 100 earthquake swarms over a 60-year period in the southern Red Sea, Afar, and Gulf of Aden region. We first compiled an earthquake-swarm catalogue by integrating reexamined global and local earthquake catalogues from 1960 to 2017. This yielded 134 earthquake swarms that mainly cluster in 19 different areas in the study region, showing that in most cases swarms recur every few decades in the same area. The swarms exhibit a range of earthquake magnitudes and often include multiple M3 to M5 events with some swarms having occasional larger earthquakes over M6, primarily in southern Afar. Many of the earthquake swarms were clearly associated with rifting events, consisting of magmatic intrusions, surface faulting, and in some cases volcanic eruptions. Together, the swarms suggest that extension at these divergent plate boundaries occurs episodically along <100 km long segments, some of which were previously unrecognized. Within the study region, the Gulf of Aden shows the most frequent swarm activity, followed by Afar and then the southern Red Sea. The results show that the three areas were subject to an increase of earthquake-swarm activity from 2003 to 2013 in the form of three rifting episodes and at least seven volcanic eruptions. We interpret that the most likely controls on temporal variations in earthquake swarm activity are either temporal variations in magma supply, or rifting-induced stress change that trigger clusters of swarms.

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