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The influence of seismic source heterogeneity and local site effects on intensity attenuation during Chilean megathrust earthquakes

  • José Tomás Drápela*
  • , Matías González
  • , Gonzalo Montalva
  • , Ignacia Calisto
  • , Felipe Leyton
  • , Daniel Stewart
  • , Rodrigo Astroza
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Intensity Prediction Equations (IPEs) for Chilean megathrust earthquakes have traditionally relied on simplified point-source representations, such as hypocentral distance (Rhyp), often neglecting source heterogeneity and local site effects. This study evaluates the performance of alternative distance metrics based on megathrust heterogeneity (i.e., asperities). We define and test three asperity-based metrics: (i) the distance to the nearest asperity (Rasp), (ii) the distance to the asperity with maximum coseismic slip (Raspmax), and (iii) a slip-weighted asperity distance (Rasppond). Using a comprehensive dataset of MSK-64 macroseismic intensities from seven major earthquakes with moment magnitudes greater than 8.0 (Mw'8.0) over the last 300 years, we calibrated and validated these metrics using a mixed-effects regression approach. Our results consistently demonstrate that asperity-based metrics significantly reduce intensity prediction uncertainty and errors, with improvements of up to 30% compared to Rhyp. Specifically, Raspmax provides the best fit for large instrumental events, while Rasppond effectively captures the macroseismic fields of historical ruptures. Additionally, incorporating the soil fundamental frequency (f0) as a proxy for site response was found to be essential for mitigating systematic bias in frequency-dependent residuals. The strong correlation between interseismic locking and coseismic slip could be use to estimate a priori asperity-based metrics to generate different hazard scenarios. These findings underscore the necessity of accounting for source and site complexity to improve seismic risk assessment and territorial planning along the Chilean subduction margin.

Original languageEnglish
Article number110282
JournalSoil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering
Volume207
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2026

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 Elsevier Ltd.

Keywords

  • Central Chile
  • Intensity prediction equations
  • Locking models
  • MSK-64 intensities
  • Megathrust earthquakes
  • Seismic source heterogeneity

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