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Message Subject It’s on now ! 7,1 just hit Peru
Poster Handle Bl4ckFir3
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Tectonic Summary
The August 24, 2018, M 7.1 earthquake near the Peru-Brazil border in southeast Peru occurred as the result of normal faulting at a depth of approximately 610 km. This earthquake occurred within the oceanic lithosphere of the subducted Nazca plate, almost 1,000 km east of the Peru-Chile Trench. Focal mechanism solutions indicate that rupture occurred on either a northwest or southeast-striking, moderately dipping normal fault. Slip on a fault of either orientation would accommodate the down-dip extension of the Nazca slab that is implied by the normal component of the faulting solution. At the location of the earthquake, the Nazca plate subducts to the east under the South America plate at a velocity of about 69 mm/yr.

As it descends eastward from the Peru-Chile Trench off the west coast of Peru, the Nazca plate is seismically active down to depths of about 200 km. Between depths of 200 and 500 km, where the Nazca plate subducts beneath eastern Peru, very few earthquakes are produced. Beneath Peru and Brazil in the border region near the August 24th earthquake, the subducted Nazca plate is again seismically active between depths of about 500 and 650 km. The deep part of the Nazca plate, in which the August 24th, 2018, earthquakes occurred, took 10 Myr or more to descend from the point at which it initially thrust under the South America plate.

Earthquakes that have focal depths greater than 300 km are commonly termed "deep-focus" earthquakes. Deep-focus earthquakes cause less damage on the ground surface above their foci than similar-magnitude shallow-focus earthquakes, but large deep-focus earthquakes may be felt at great distance from their epicenters. The largest recorded deep-focus earthquake was a M 8.3 event that occurred at a depth of 600 km within the subducted Pacific plate beneath the Sea of Okhotsk offshore of northeastern Russia in 2013. The M 8.3 Okhotsk earthquake was felt all over Asia, as far away as Moscow, and across the Pacific Ocean along the western seaboard of the United States (though at distant locations, individuals reporting having felt the event were likely very favorably situated for the perception of small ground motions). Prior to 2013, the largest recorded deep-focus earthquake was a M 8.2 event that occurred at a depth of 630 km within the subducted Nazca plate near the northern Bolivian border in 1994, approximately 450 km southeast of the August 24, 2018 event. The M 8.2 Bolivian deep-focus earthquake in 1994 had similarly been reported by individuals in North America at great distance from the epicenter.

Over the past century, 95 earthquakes of M 7+ have occurred at depths greater than 300 km globally; 12 of these were located in the same region as the August 24, 2018 event. The largest nearby events at these depths were a doublet of M 7.6 earthquakes 60-110 km to the northwest of the August 24, 2018 earthquake in November 2015.
 
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