4.6 Article

Mechanism of the 2017 Mw 6.3 Pasni earthquake and its significance for future major earthquakes in the eastern Makran

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL
Volume 231, Issue 2, Pages 1434-1445

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gji/ggac257

Keywords

Tsunamis; Earthquake dynamics; Earthquake hazards; Seismicity and tectonics; Subduction zone processes

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [42076059, 41890813, 41976066, 41976064]
  2. Key Special Project for Introduced Talents Team of Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Guangzhou) [GML2019ZD0205]
  3. Chinese Academy of Sciences [Y4SL021001, QYZDY-SSW-DQC005, 131551KYSB20200021, ISEE2021PY03, 133244KYSB20180029, E1SL3C02]
  4. Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation [2021B1515020098]
  5. China-Pakistan Joint Research Centre on Earth Sciences

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The Makran subduction zone is an active area with uncertain earthquake and tsunami characteristics. By studying the characteristics of a recent earthquake in 2017, we have identified some key features and suggested the possibility of future earthquakes.
Makran subduction zone is very active with similar to 38 mm yr(-1) convergence rate and has experienced great earthquakes in the past. The latest great earthquake of 1945 M-w 8.1 event also triggered a large tsunami and led to similar to 4000 casualties. However, due to incomplete historical seismicity records and poor modern instrumentation, earthquake mechanism, co-seismic slip and tsunami characteristics in Makran remain unclear. On 2017 February 17, an M-w 6.3 earthquake rattled offshore Pasni of Pakistan in the eastern Makran, marking the largest event after the 1945 M-w 8.1 earthquake with good geodetic and geophysical data coverage. We use a combination of seismicity, multibeam bathymetry, seismic profile, InSAR measurements and tide-gauge observation to investigate the seismogenic structure, co-seismic deformation, tsunami characteristics of this event and its implication for future major earthquakes. Our results indicate that (1) the earthquake occurred on the shallow-dipping (3 degrees-4 degrees) megathrust; (2) the megathrust co-seismically slipped 15 cm and caused similar to 2-4 cm ground subsidence and uplift at Pasni; (3) our tsunami modelling reproduces the observed 5-cm-high small tsunami waveforms. The Pasni earthquake rupture largely overlaps the 1945 slip patch and disturbs the west and east megathrust segments that have not ruptured yet at least since 1765. With such stress perturbation and possible stress evolution effect from the 1945 earthquake, the unruptured patches may fail in the future. This study calls for more preparedness in mitigating earthquake and associated hazards in the eastern Makran.

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