4.5 Article

2021 US National Seismic Hazard Model for the State of Hawaii

Journal

EARTHQUAKE SPECTRA
Volume 38, Issue 2, Pages 865-916

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/87552930211052061

Keywords

US National Seismic Hazard Model; Hawaii; earthquake rupture forecast; ground motion model; seismic risk

Funding

  1. US. Geological Survey Earthquake Hazards Program (EHP)

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The 2021 US National Seismic Hazard Model (NSHM) for the State of Hawaii has updated the previous assessment by incorporating new data and modeling techniques, providing more accurate forecasts for ground shaking in the region. The results show that there is a significant chance of slight or greater damaging ground motions across most of the island chain.
The 2021 US National Seismic Hazard Model (NSHM) for the State of Hawaii updates the previous two-decade-old assessment by incorporating new data and modeling techniques to improve the underlying ground shaking forecasts of tectonic-fault, tectonic-flexure, volcanic, and caldera collapse earthquakes. Two earthquake ground shaking hazard forecasts (public policy and research) are produced that differ in how they account for declustered catalogs. The earthquake source model is based on (1) declustered earthquake catalogs smoothed with adaptive methods, (2) earthquake rate forecasts based on three temporally varying 60-year time periods, (3) maximum magnitude criteria that extend to larger earthquakes than previously considered, (4) a separate Kilauea-specific seismogenic caldera collapse model that accounts for clustered event behavior observed during the 2018 eruption, and (5) fault ruptures that consider historical seismicity, GPS-based strain rates, and a new Quaternary fault database. Two new Hawaii-specific ground motion models (GMMs) and five additional global models consistent with Hawaii shaking data are used to forecast ground shaking at 23 spectral periods and peak parameters. Site effects are calculated using western US and Hawaii specific empirical equations and provide shaking forecasts for 8 site classes. For most sites the new analysis results in similar spectral accelerations as those in the 2001 NSHM, with a few exceptions caused mostly by GMM changes. Ground motions are the highest in the southern portion of the Island of Hawai'i due to high rates of forecasted earthquakes on decollement faults. Shaking decays to the northwest where lower earthquake rates result from flexure of the tectonic plate. Large epistemic uncertainties in source characterizations and GMMs lead to an overall high uncertainty (more than a factor of 3) in ground shaking at Honolulu and Hilo. The new shaking model indicates significant chances of slight or greater damaging ground motions across most of the island chain.

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