摘要

Crustal collision between Eurasia and the Indian subcontinent has produced a thrust fault system that accommodates a share of the strain associated with convergence. The foremost of these faults is the Himalayan Frontal Thrust (HFT), also referred to as the Main Frontal Thrust (MFT). Discrete segments of the HFT have produced numerous, large-magnitude earthquakes throughout the last two centuries that are constrained through instrumental and historical records. Paleoseismic studies have established comparable constraint for pre-instrumental ruptures of the fault. The segment of the fault known as the Central Seismic Gap (CSG), which extends from North-Central India into Western Nepal, is of particular interest due to an apparent long-term quiescence that suggests the potential for impending large-scale rupture. Here we compile recent, paleoseismological findings from seven published trench sites into a coherent OxCal age model for large-magnitude ruptures along the CSG. Our results indicate that the western half of the CSG likely ruptured in the event corresponding to historical accounts of an earthquake in 1344 CE.

  • 出版日期2017-12-30