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智利北部再发8.4级地震【虚拟测定】

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零度星系 发表于 2014-4-3 13:25 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式 来自: 四川省南充市 电信

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根据国家地震自动速报备份系统信息:智利北部北京时间4月3日【今日】上午10:43:24.220发生8.4级!
 楼主| 零度星系 发表于 2014-4-3 13:25 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 四川省南充市 电信

                               
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smartmars 发表于 2014-4-3 14:21 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 广东省广州市 电信
连续两次8+地震?
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BlackEyeGalaxy 发表于 2014-4-3 14:27 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 上海市徐汇区 电信
本帖最后由 BlackEyeGalaxy 于 2014-4-3 14:46 编辑

没有发生。只是中国地震局进行虚拟测定,进行测试。实际是矩震级7.6级地震。
Tectonic SummaryThe April 3, 2014 M 7.6 earthquake off the west coast of northern Chile occurred as a result of thrust motion at a depth of approximately 40 km, 23 km south of the city Iquique. The location and mechanism of the earthquake are consistent with slip on the plate boundary interface, or megathrust, between the Nazca and South America plates. At the latitude of the event, the Nazca plate is subducting beneath South America at a rate of ~73 mm/yr.

This earthquake is an aftershock of the M 8.2 subduction zone earthquake that occurred April 1, 2014. The M 8.2 event triggered a tsunami with measured heights near 2 meters along the northern Chile and southern Peru coasts. Since the M8.2 event, 47 aftershocks ranging from M 4.2 to this M 7.8 event have occurred, including a M 6.4 on April 2. The current seismic sequence was preceeded by a foreshock sequence that began on March 16, 2014, with a M 6.7 earthquake close to the epicenter of the April 1 M 8.2 event. This segment of the subduction zone, known as the Iquique or Northern Chile seismic gap, last ruptured during the 1877 M8.8 Iquique earthquake. Other recent large plate boundary ruptures bound the possible rupture area of the April 1 event, including the 2001 M 8.4 Peru earthquake adjacent to the south coast of Peru to the north, and the 2007 M 7.7 Tocopilla, Chile and 1995 M 8.1 Antofagasta, Chile earthquakes to the south.

Seismotectonics of South America (Nazca Plate Region)The South American arc extends over 7,000 km, from the Chilean margin   triple junction offshore of southern Chile to its intersection with the Panama   fracture zone, offshore of the southern coast of Panama in Central America.   It marks the plate boundary between the subducting Nazca plate and the   South America plate, where the oceanic crust and lithosphere of the Nazca   plate begin their descent into the mantle beneath South America. The   convergence associated with this subduction process is responsible for the   uplift of the Andes Mountains, and for the active volcanic chain present along   much of this deformation front. Relative to a fixed South America plate, the   Nazca plate moves slightly north of eastwards at a rate varying from   approximately 80 mm/yr in the south to approximately 65 mm/yr in the north.    Although the rate of subduction varies little along the entire arc, there are   complex changes in the geologic processes along the subduction zone that   dramatically influence volcanic activity, crustal deformation, earthquake   generation and occurrence all along the western edge of South America.
Most of the large earthquakes in South America are constrained to shallow   depths of 0 to 70 km resulting from both crustal and interplate deformation.   Crustal earthquakes result from deformation and mountain building in the   overriding South America plate and generate earthquakes as deep as   approximately 50 km. Interplate earthquakes occur due to slip along the   dipping interface between the Nazca and the South American plates.   Interplate earthquakes in this region are frequent and often large, and occur   between the depths of approximately 10 and 60 km.  Since 1900, numerous   magnitude 8 or larger earthquakes have occurred on this subduction zone   interface that were followed by devastating tsunamis, including the 1960 M9.5   earthquake in southern Chile, the largest instrumentally recorded earthquake in   the world. Other notable shallow tsunami-generating earthquakes include the   1906 M8.5 earthquake near Esmeraldas, Ecuador, the 1922 M8.5 earthquake   near Coquimbo, Chile, the 2001 M8.4 Arequipa, Peru earthquake, the 2007   M8.0 earthquake near Pisco, Peru, and the 2010 M8.8 Maule, Chile earthquake   located just north of the 1960 event.
Large intermediate-depth earthquakes (those occurring between depths of   approximately 70 and 300 km) are relatively limited in size and spatial extent in   South America, and occur within the Nazca plate as a result of internal   deformation within the subducting plate. These earthquakes generally cluster   beneath northern Chile and southwestern Bolivia, and to a lesser extent beneath   northern Peru and southern Ecuador, with depths between 110 and 130 km. Most   of these earthquakes occur adjacent to the bend in the coastline between Peru   and Chile. The most recent large intermediate-depth earthquake in this region was   the 2005 M7.8 Tarapaca, Chile earthquake.
Earthquakes can also be generated to depths greater than 600 km as a   result of continued internal deformation of the subducting Nazca plate.   Deep-focus earthquakes in South America are not observed from a depth   range of approximately 300 to 500 km. Instead, deep earthquakes in this   region occur at depths of 500 to 650 km and are concentrated into two   zones: one that runs beneath the Peru-Brazil border and another that   extends from central Bolivia to central Argentina. These earthquakes   generally do not exhibit large magnitudes. An exception to this was the   1994 Bolivian earthquake in northwestern Bolivia. This M8.2 earthquake occurred at a depth of 631 km, which was until recently the largest deep-focus earthquake instrumentally recorded (superseded in May 2013 by a M8.3 earthquake 610 km beneath the Sea of Okhotsk, Russia), and was felt widely throughout South and North America.
Subduction of the Nazca plate is geometrically complex and impacts the geology   and seismicity of the western edge of South America. The intermediate-depth   regions of the subducting Nazca plate can be segmented into five sections based   on their angle of subduction beneath the South America plate. Three segments are   characterized by steeply dipping subduction; the other two by near-horizontal   subduction. The Nazca plate beneath northern Ecuador, southern Peru to northern   Chile, and southern Chile descend into the mantle at angles of 25° to 30°. In contrast,   the slab beneath southern Ecuador to central Peru, and under central Chile, is   subducting at a shallow angle of approximately 10° or less.  In these regions of   “flat-slab” subduction, the Nazca plate moves horizontally for several hundred   kilometers before continuing its descent into the mantle, and is shadowed by an   extended zone of crustal seismicity in the overlying South America plate. Although the   South America plate exhibits a chain of active volcanism resulting from the subduction   and partial melting of the Nazca oceanic lithosphere along most of the arc, these   regions of inferred shallow subduction correlate with an absence of volcanic activity.

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天狼星666 发表于 2014-4-3 14:46 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 内蒙古赤峰市 电信
虚拟测定?不太明白
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天文之乐 发表于 2014-4-3 15:22 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 云南省昆明市呈贡县 电信
我在权威的地震信息系统里表示没有看到
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旅行者2号 发表于 2014-4-3 15:53 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 辽宁省大连市 联通
最终确定震级为M7.8,并伴有大量余震。
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hhbb 发表于 2014-4-3 19:56 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 湖北省武汉市 联通
虚拟测定啥意思?
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149015604 发表于 2014-4-3 21:11 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 广东省深圳市 电信
震级虚拟测定吧。。
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