The
Aceh Earthquake Caused by Thrust-Faulting
Sumber : USGS.gov (U.S. Geological Survey)
The
devastating megathrust earthquake of December 26, 2004 Magnitude
9.0, occurred on the interface of the India and Burma plates and was
caused by the release of stresses that develop as the India plate subducts
beneath the overriding Burma plate. The India plate begins its descent into the
mantle at the Sunda trench, which lies to the west of the earthquake's
epicenter. The trench is the surface expression of the plate interface between
the Australia and India plates, situated to the southwest of the trench, and the
Burma and Sunda plates, situated to the northeast.
In the region of the earthquake, the India plate moves toward the northeast at a
rate of about 6 cm/year relative to the Burma plate. This results in oblique
convergence at the Sunda trench. The oblique motion is partitioned into
thrust-faulting, which occurs on the plate-interface and which involves slip
directed perpendicular to the trench, and strike-slip faulting, which occurs
several hundred kilometers to the east of the trench and involves slip directed
parallel to the trench. The December 26 earthquake occurred as the result of
thrust-faulting.
Preliminary locations of larger aftershocks following the megathrust earthquake
show that approximately 1200 km of the plate boundary slipped as a result of the
earthquake. By comparison with other large megathrust earthquakes, the width of
the causative fault-rupture was likely over one-hundred km. From the size of the
earthquake, it is likely that the average displacement on the fault plane was
about fifteen meters. The sea floor overlying the thrust fault would have been
uplifted by several meters as a result of the earthquake. The above estimates of
fault-dimensions and displacement will be refined in the near future as the
result of detailed analyses of the earthquake waves.
The world's largest recorded earthquakes have all been megathrust events,
occurring where one tectonic plate subducts beneath another. These include:
the magnitude 9.5 1960 Chile earthquake, the magnitude 9.2 1964 Prince William
Sound, Alaska, earthquake, the magnitude 9.1 1957 Andreanof Islands, Alaska,
earthquake, and the magnitude 9.0 1952 Kamchatka earthquake. As with the recent
event, megathrust earthquakes often generate large tsunamis that cause damage
over a much wider area than is directly affected by ground shaking near the
earthquake's rupture.