Along-strike variability in the seismogenic zone below Nicoya Peninsula, Costa Rica

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Abstract

At the subduction zone in northwestern Costa Rica, the seismogenic zone lies directly beneath the Nicoya Peninsula, allowing for near source seismic studies of earthquake activity. We located 650 earthquakes along the seismogenic plate interface using a dense seismic network in the vicinity of the Nicoya Peninsula. Using these data we constrained the updip limit of the seismogenic zone there and found a transition in depth, 10 km in the south to 20 km in the north, that occurs where the subducting oceanic crust changes from warmer Cocos-Nazca Spreading center (CNS) origin to colder East Pacific Rise (EPR) origin. We argue that the temperature of the incoming oceanic crust controls the seismogenic updip limit beneath Nicoya, Costa Rica; subducting colder oceanic crust deepens the seismogenic updip limit.

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Newman, A. V., Schwartz, S. Y., Gonzalez, V., Deshon, H. R., Protti, J. M., & Dorman, L. M. (2002). Along-strike variability in the seismogenic zone below Nicoya Peninsula, Costa Rica. Geophysical Research Letters, 29(20). https://doi.org/10.1029/2002GL015409

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