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Showing papers by "Ya-Ju Hsu published in 2001"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a curved fault surface consisting of multiple segments dipping 20-25° best fits the observations of the Chi-Chi, Taiwan earthquake, and the model fault exhibits reverse and left-lateral slip on a 75 km long N-S trending segment.
Abstract: GPS measurements of coseismic displacements from the 1999, Chi-Chi, Taiwan earthquake are modeled using elastic dislocation theory. We find that a single fault plane cannot fit the data, but rather a curved fault surface consisting of multiple segments dipping 20–25° best fits the observations. The model fault exhibits reverse and left-lateral slip on a 75 km long N-S trending segment and reverse and right-lateral slip on a 25 km E-W trending segment at the northern end of the rupture. The 21° dipping E-W segment is inconsistent with previous interpretations of high angle tear faulting.

129 citations