The Sept. 21, 1999 Chi-Chi Earthquake in Taiwan: Implications for Tsunami Earthquakes

Tetsuzo SENO

Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo

Submitted to Terr. Atmos. Ocean, 11, 701-708, 2000

The 1999 Chichi earthquake in Taiwan can be regarded as a subduction zone earthquake in a tectonic sense. It was associated with an abnormally uplifted area at the northwestern corner of the earthquake fault. The area is the river bed where the Ta-Chia River is running from east to west. The large horizontal movement of the basement south of the river to the north could have produced the multiple thrusts and the abnormal uplifts amounting to 3-6 m due to the shortening of the accretionary prism.
This inelastic uplift would imply an abnormal tsunami if the area were under the sea, thus suggesting a new factor for the mechanism of tsunami earthquakes, which is an uplift of the sediment or weak accretionary prism caused by a sudden horizontal movement on the decollement beneath the lowermost inner trench slope causes like sand being pushed by a bulldozer. This is consistent with the features of tsunami earthquakes having the low dip angle thrust extending to the trench.