Primary surface rupture of the 1950 Tibet-Assam great earthquake along the eastern Himalayan front, India

Abstract The pattern of strain accumulation and its release during earthquakes along the eastern Himalayan syntaxis is unclear due to its structural complexity and lack of primary surface signatures associated with large-to-great earthquakes. This led to a consensus that these earthquakes occurred o...

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Main Authors: Rao Singh Priyanka, R. Jayangondaperumal, Arjun Pandey, Rajeeb Lochan Mishra, Ishwar Singh, Ravi Bhushan, Pradeep Srivastava, S. Ramachandran, Chinmay Shah, Sumita Kedia, Arun Kumar Sharma, Gulam Rasool Bhat
Format: article
Language:EN
Published: Nature Portfolio 2017
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R
Q
Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/b4ff0b2fd02944a2aff33931e45dc510
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Summary:Abstract The pattern of strain accumulation and its release during earthquakes along the eastern Himalayan syntaxis is unclear due to its structural complexity and lack of primary surface signatures associated with large-to-great earthquakes. This led to a consensus that these earthquakes occurred on blind faults. Toward understanding this issue, palaeoseismic trenching was conducted across a ~3.1 m high fault scarp preserved along the mountain front at Pasighat (95.33°E, 28.07°N). Multi-proxy radiometric dating employed to the stratigraphic units and detrital charcoals obtained from the trench exposures provide chronological constraint on the discovered palaeoearthquake surface rupture clearly suggesting that the 15th August, 1950 Tibet-Assam earthquake (Mw ~ 8.6) did break the eastern Himalayan front producing a co-seismic slip of 5.5 ± 0.7 meters. This study corroborates the first instance in using post-bomb radiogenic isotopes to help identify an earthquake rupture.