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Seismotectonics of the Explorer region

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Title Seismotectonics of the Explorer region
Names Braunmiller, Jochen (creator)
Nábělek, John (creator)
Date Issued 2002 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union.
Abstract The Explorer region offshore western Canada is a tectonically complex area
surrounded by the Pacific, North America, and Juan de Fuca plates. Existing tectonic
models for the region differ fundamentally. Proposed plate configurations range from
multiple independent plate fragments to an Explorer plate now fused to North America
along the continental margin and cut by Pacific–North America transform faults in the
west.We present new seismological data constraining the region’s current tectonics.We use
three-component regional waveforms to determine the source parameters of 84 earthquakes
with magnitude greater than 4. Combined with 34 Harvard centroid moment tensor
solutions, they represent the region’s largest earthquake source parameter data set obtained
by robust waveform modeling techniques. In addition, we perform joint epicenter
determination to relocate larger earthquakes recorded since 1918. The source parameters
and improved locations provide a consistent tectonic picture. Earthquake slip vector
azimuths along the Pacific plate boundary change smoothly and are significantly less
northerly oriented than the Pacific-North America plate motion direction, requiring an
independent Explorer plate. The present-day Pacific-Explorer boundary is formed by
transform faults subparallel to the Revere-Dellwood-Wilson fault. Plate motion vectors
indicate that theWinona block is part of the Explorer plate. Current Explorer motion is more
northerly than indicated by magnetic anomalies prior to 2 Ma, implying a recent change,
possibly coinciding with a northwestward ridge jump near Explorer plate’s northern end
transferring the Winona block from the Pacific to the Explorer plate. In response to
these plate motion changes the region north of the western Sovanco fracture zone was
assimilated into the Pacific plate. The region around the eastern Sovanco fracture zone,
characterized by broadly distributed seismicity, is composed of well-defined sets of
conjugate faults bounding rotating crustal blocks. Earthquake fault strikes agree with the
dominant northwest-southeast fault sets; however, the conjugate sets must be also active to
fully accommodate present-day Explorer plate motion. The SW portion of the strike-slip
Nootka fault zone, the Explorer-Juan de Fuca plate boundary, is well defined by focused
seismicity; however, its full extent under Nootka Island remains unresolved. The Explorer–
North America boundary shows sporadic low-magnitude seismicity. Our Explorer–North
America rotation pole predicts convergence varying from negligible at the boundary’s
northwest end to 2 cm/yr at the SE end. This convergence can be accommodated either by
subduction or by crustal thickening extending to the North American continent. We favor
subduction based on low deformation rates observed by onshore GPS sites. The present
Explorer plate system configuration is a result of stepwise reorientation of the Explorer
ridge system, each step successively reducing the subduction rate relative to North
America.
Genre Article
Topic Seismotectonics
Identifier Braunmiller, J., & Nábělek, J. (2002). Seismotectonics of the Explorer region. Journal of Geophysical Research, 107(B10).

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