Article
A hybrid deterministic and stochastic approach for tsunami hazard assessment in Iquique, Chile
Un enfoque híbrido determinista y estocástico para la evaluación del peligro de tsunamis en Iquique, Chile
Registro en:
Natural Hazards (2020) 100:231–254
0921-030X
Autor
González, Juan
González, Gabriel
Aránguiz Muñoz, Rafael Enrique
Melgar, Diego
Zamora, Natalia
Shrivastava, Mahesh N.
Das, Ranjit
Catalán, Patricio A.
Cienfuegos, Rodrigo
Resumen
The southern Peru and northern Chile coastal region is an active subduction zone that contains one of the most signifcant seismic gaps in the eastern Pacifc basin (~17°S–~24°S).
Although the gap was partially flled by the 2014 Mw 8.1 Iquique earthquake, there is still
a high seismogenic potential to release a Mw ~9 earthquake in the near future; therefore,
all the near-feld coastal cities in the region face a latent tsunami threat. In this article,
we propose a hybrid deterministic–stochastic multi-scenario approach to assess the current tsunami hazard level in the city of Iquique, an important commercial and industrial
center of northern Chile that is home to 184,000 inhabitants. In our approach, we defned
400 stochastic, 10 deterministic and 10 homogeneous tsunamigenic earthquake scenarios,
covering the entire area of the seismic gap. Based on the regional distribution of gravity
anomalies and published interseismic coupling distributions, we interpreted the occurrence
of four major asperities in the subduction interface of the seismic gap. The asperity pattern
was used to construct a group of deterministic slip-defcit earthquake sources with seismic
magnitudes ranging between Mw 8.4 and Mw 8.9. Additionally, we constructed 10 homogeneous slip scenarios to generate an inundation baseline for the tsunami hazard. Subsequently, following a stochastic scheme, we implemented a Karhunen–Loève expansion to
generate 400 stochastic earthquake scenarios within the same magnitude range as the deterministic slip-defcit sources. All sources were used as earthquake scenarios to simulate the
tsunami propagation and inundation by means of a non-hydrostatic model (Neowave 2D)
with a classical nesting scheme for the city of Iquique. We obtained high-resolution data
for fow depth, coastal surface currents and sea level elevation. The results suggest that the
peak slip location and shelf resonance play an important role in the calculated coastal fow
depths. The analysis of the entire set of simulated stochastic earthquake scenarios indicates
that the worst-case scenario for Iquique is a Mw 8.9 earthquake. This scenario presented a
tsunami arrival time of ~12 min, which is critical for the evacuation process. In addition,
the maximum wave height and tsunami fow depth were found to be ~10 m and ~24 m,
respectively. The observed coastal resonance processes exhibit at least three destructive
tsunami wave trains. Based on historical and instrumental catalog statistics, the recurrence
time of the credible worst-case earthquake scenario for Iquique (Mw 8.9) is 395 years, with
a probability of occurrence of ~11.86% in the next 50 years.