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Constraining large earthquakes along the Andaman trench using deepwater turbidites: prospects and challenges

Rajendran, CP and Andrade, Vanessa and Sanwal, Jaishri and Kurian, John and Jena, Babula (2013) Constraining large earthquakes along the Andaman trench using deepwater turbidites: prospects and challenges. In: Current Science, 104 (10). pp. 1300-1307.

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Official URL: http://www.currentscience.ac.in/php/toc.php?vol=10...

Abstract

The 2004 Sumatra-Andaman earthquake was unprecedented in terms of its magnitude (M-w 9.2), rupture length along the plate boundary (1300 km) and size of the resultant tsunami. Since 2004, efforts are being made to improve the understanding of the seismic hazard in the Sumatra-Andaman subduction zone in terms of recurrence patterns of major earthquakes and tsunamis. It is reasonable to assume that previous earthquake events in the Myanmar Andaman segment must be preserved in the geological record in the form of seismo-turbidite sequences. Here we present the prospects of conducting deep ocean palaeoseismicity investigations in order to refine the quantification of the recurrence pattern of large subduction-zone earthquakes along the Andaman-Myanmar arc. Our participation in the Sagar Kanya cruise SK-273 (in June 2010) was to test the efficacy of such a survey. The primary mission of the cruise, along a short length (300 km) of the Sumatra Andaman subduction front was to collect bathymetric data of the ocean floor trenchward of the Andaman Islands. The agenda of our piggyback survey was to fix potential coring sites that might preserve seismo-turbidite deposits. In this article we present the possibilities and challenges of such an exercise and our first-hand experience of such a preliminary survey. This account will help future researchers with similar scientific objectives who would want to survey the deep ocean archives of this region for evidence of extreme events like major earthquakes.

Item Type: Journal Article
Publication: Current Science
Publisher: Current Science Association
Additional Information: Copyright of this article belongs to Current Science Association.
Department/Centre:
Date Deposited: 18 Jul 2013 06:59
Last Modified: 18 Jul 2013 06:59
URI: http://eprints.iisc.ac.in/id/eprint/46866

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