North-Central Section - 38th Annual Meeting (April 1–2, 2004)

Paper No. 4
Presentation Time: 2:00 PM

STRESS EVOLUTION AND SEISMICITY WITHIN THE NEW MADRID SEISMIC ZONE


LI, Qingsong, LIU, Mian and SANDVOL, Eric, Department of Geological Sciences, Univ of Missouri-Columbia, 101 Geology Building, Columbia, MO 65211, qlpkd@mizzou.edu

Intraplate earthquakes within the stable interior of the North America plate are surprisingly common, large, and poorly understood. The New Madrid Seismic Zone (NMSZ), with three large events (M=7.0-7.5) in 1811-1812, is the most prominent intraplate seismic zone within the stable North America plate. However, most of the post-1811-1812 moderate events (M>5) occurred not within the seismically defined NMSZ but in the surrounding regions. We have simulated stress evolution in the NMSZ and surrounding regions following the 1811-1812 events. Our results show that re-accumulation of Coulomb stress within the NMSZ following the 1811-1812 events is slow and always lags behind that in the surrounding regions, where the relatively strong crust could support the stress released by the 1811-1812 events. The regions with the predicted highest Coulomb stress increase are found in southern Illinois and eastern Arkansas, consistent with the distribution of moderately sized (M>5) earthquakes following the 1811-1812 NMSZ events. We have combined the NMSZ model with a regional-scale stress evolution model to better understand the interplay between local and regional tectonic processes in controlling seismicity in the NMSZ and other intraplate seismic zones in the eastern-central North American plate.