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Seismicity and tectonics around the northern Antarctic Peninsula from King Sejong station data

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 May 2004

D.K. Lee
Affiliation:
Polar Research Center, Korea Ocean Research and Development Institute, Ansan, PO Box 29, 425-600, Korea Current address Pookyung National University, Pusan, Korea
Y.K. Jin
Affiliation:
Polar Research Center, Korea Ocean Research and Development Institute, Ansan, PO Box 29, 425-600, Korea
Y. Kim
Affiliation:
Polar Research Center, Korea Ocean Research and Development Institute, Ansan, PO Box 29, 425-600, Korea
S.H. Nam
Affiliation:
Polar Research Center, Korea Ocean Research and Development Institute, Ansan, PO Box 29, 425-600, Korea

Abstract

Local earthquakes recorded at the King Sejong station (62° 13′31″S, 58° 47′07″W) from 1995–96 have been analysed to study the seismicity and tectonics around the northern Antarctic Peninsula. The nature of shallow-focused normal fault earthquakes along the South Shetland Platform is still unclear. Dominant normal fault earthquakes and minor strike-slip earthquakes in the Eastern Bransfield Basin suggest 1) ongoing extension, and 2) transtensional stress transmitted from the Antarctic–Scotia transform boundaries, the South Scotia Ridge and the Shackleton Fracture Zone. A lack of seismicity in the Central Bransfield Basin supports that active seismicity in the Eastern Bransfield Basin is not a result of subduction along the South Shetland Trench. Shallow focused earthquakes have been observed along the NW–SE trending gravity low line between the Central and the Eastern Bransfield Basins that approximately coincides with the landward projection of a fracture zone in the former Phoenix Plate.

Type
Paper—Earth Sciences and Glaciology
Copyright
© Antarctic Science Ltd 2000

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