4.4 Article

Coupled, Physics-Based Modeling Reveals Earthquake Displacements are Critical to the 2018 Palu, Sulawesi Tsunami

Journal

PURE AND APPLIED GEOPHYSICS
Volume 176, Issue 10, Pages 4069-4109

Publisher

SPRINGER BASEL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s00024-019-02290-5

Keywords

Sulawesi; tsunami; earthquake dynamics; coupled model; physics-based modeling; strike slip

Funding

  1. JAXA RA6 PI projects [P3278, P3360]
  2. Volkswagen Foundation (project ASCETE'') [88479]
  3. Leibniz Supercomputing Centre (LRZ) [h019z, pr63qo, pr45fi]
  4. German Research Foundation (DFG) [KA 2281/4-1, GA 2465/2-1, GA 2465/3-1]
  5. BaCaTec [A4]
  6. BayLat
  7. KON-WIHR-the Bavarian Competence Network for Technical and Scientific High Performance Computing (Project NewWave)
  8. KAUST-CRG (GAST) [ORS-2016-CRG5-3027]
  9. KAUST-CRG (FRAGEN) [ORS-2017-CRG6 3389.02]
  10. European Union [671698, 823844]
  11. Einstein Stiftung Berlin [EVF-2017358]
  12. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) by Earth Surface and Interior focus area
  13. NISAR Science Team

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The September 2018, M-w 7.5 Sulawesi earthquake occurring on the Palu-Koro strike-slip fault system was followed by an unexpected localized tsunami. We show that direct earthquake-induced uplift and subsidence could have sourced the observed tsunami within Palu Bay. To this end, we use a physics-based, coupled earthquake-tsunami modeling framework tightly constrained by observations. The model combines rupture dynamics, seismic wave propagation, tsunami propagation and inundation. The earthquake scenario, featuring sustained supershear rupture propagation, matches key observed earthquake characteristics, including the moment magnitude, rupture duration, fault plane solution, teleseismic waveforms and inferred horizontal ground displacements. The remote stress regime reflecting regional transtension applied in the model produces a combination of up to 6 m left-lateral slip and up to 2 m normal slip on the straight fault segment dipping 65 degrees East beneath Palu Bay. The time-dependent, 3D seafloor displacements are translated into bathymetry perturbations with a mean vertical offset of 1.5 m across the submarine fault segment. This sources a tsunami with wave amplitudes and periods that match those measured at the Pantoloan wave gauge and inundation that reproduces observations from field surveys. We conclude that a source related to earthquake displacements is probable and that landsliding may not have been the primary source of the tsunami. These results have important implications for submarine strike-slip fault systems worldwide. Physics-based modeling offers rapid response specifically in tectonic settings that are currently underrepresented in operational tsunami hazard assessment.

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