Understanding the shallow rupture mechanisms on coseismic faults and assessing the influence of fault area propagation is essential for disaster prevention. Since 2000, Hualien and nearby areas in eastern Taiwan have experienced frequent earthquakes, making it a good area to study the evolution of fault rupture. This study proposes a two-dimensional dynamic discrete element model to simulate the shallow rupture behavior of the Milun Fault. Results indicate that the rupture process proceeds through multiple evolutionary stages, with fractures propagating upward from depth but failing to fully break through to the surface, resulting instead in surface cracking without complete rupture. The second deviatoric stress invariant serves as an effective indicator of stress accumulation and release during rupture progression. For the preferred model, the modeled vertical uplift near the fault reached 0.6 m, consistent with field observations reporting a maximum coseismic uplift of approximately 0.585 m along the Milun Fault. Given the scarcity of near-fault observational constraints, the simulation represents a physically plausible scenario rather than a unique reconstruction. The integration of stress evolution, crack propagation, and near-field displacement provides new insight into the mechanical processes governing shallow thrust fault rupture and can be applied to similar fault systems exhibiting near-surface deformation.
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Guo et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a75b5ec6e9836116a22956 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/app16031265
Xiao-Fei Guo
Peking University
Yosuke Aoki
The University of Tokyo
Jiang-Hai Li
Peking University
Applied Sciences
SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología
The University of Tokyo
Peking University
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