The 17 July 2006 Java tsunami earthquake
Abstract
The 17 July 2006 Java earthquake involved thrust faulting in the Java trench and excited a deadly tsunami (~5-8 m) that inundated the southern coast of Java. The earthquake's size estimates vary significantly with seismic wave period: very long-period signals (300-500+ s) indicate a seismic moment of 6.7 × 1020 Nm (Mw = 7.8), MS (~20 s) = 7.2, mb (~1 s) = 6.2, while shaking intensities (3-10 Hz) were <= MMIV. The large tsunami relative to MS characterizes this event as a tsunami earthquake. Like previous tsunami earthquakes, the Java event had an unusually low rupture speed of 1.0-1.5 km/s, and occurred near the up-dip edge of the subduction zone thrust fault. Most large aftershocks involved normal faulting. The rupture propagated ~200 km along the trench, with several pulses of shorter period seismic radiation superimposed on a smooth background rupture with an overall duration of ~185 s.
- Publication:
-
Geophysical Research Letters
- Pub Date:
- December 2006
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2006GeoRL..3324308A
- Keywords:
-
- Geodesy and Gravity: Transient deformation (6924;
- 7230;
- 7240);
- Seismology: Earthquake source observations (1240);
- Seismology: Earthquake dynamics (1242);
- Seismology: Seismicity and tectonics (1207;
- 1217;
- 1240;
- 1242);
- Seismology: Surface waves and free oscillations