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Award ID contains: 2201417

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  1. Abstract The Enriquillo–Plantain Garden fault (EPGF), the southern branch of the northern Caribbean left-lateral transpressional plate boundary, has ruptured in two devastating earthquakes along the Haiti southern peninsula: the Mw 7.0, 2010 Haiti and the Mw 7.2, 2021 Nippes earthquakes. In Jamaica, the 1692 Port Royal and 1907 Great Kingston earthquakes caused widespread damage and loss of life. No large earthquakes are known from the 200-km-long Jamaica Passage segment of this plate boundary. To address these hazards, a National Science Foundation Rapid Response survey was conducted to map the EPGF in the Jamaica Passage south of Kingston, Jamaica, and east of the island of Jamaica. From the R/V Pelican we collected >50 high-resolution seismic profiles and 47 gravity cores. Event deposits (EDs) were identified from lithology, physical properties, and geochemistry and were dated in 13 cores. A robust 14C chronology was obtained for the Holocene. A Bayesian age model using OxCal 4.4 calibration was applied. Out of 58 EDs that were recognized, 50 have ages that overlap within their 95% confidence ranges. This allowed for their grouping in multiple basins located as much as 150 km apart. The significant age overlap suggests that EDs along the Enriquillo–Plantain Garden plate boundary resulted from large and potentially dangerous earthquakes. Most of these earthquakes may derive from the EPGF but also from thrust faulting at this strain-partitioned transpressional boundary. The recent increase in Coulomb stress on the EPGF from the Mw 7.2 Nippes earthquake in southwestern Haiti and the discoveries reported here enhance the significance for hazard in the Jamaica Passage. 
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  2. Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2026
  3. The 2011 Mw9.0 Tohoku-Oki earthquake may be representative of “maximum”earthquakes: it ruptured the entire seismogenic depth range of the Japan megathrust, including the shallowest segment that reaches the trench where the displacement grew to 60 m and spawned a catastrophic tsunami. Models and direct seafloor measurements imply a comparably large initial relative motion and sustained long-period oscillations between sediment and water at the seafloor above the shallowest megathrust segment. This motion may develop enough shear to re-suspend sediment, but exclusively for the maximum earthquakes. This new co-seismic sediment-entrainment process should leave a recognizable sedimentary fingerprint of these earthquakes. Our physical experiments are testing effects of this shear between sediment and water and its interaction with high-frequency vertical shaking. We also investigate the impact of sediment properties and slope on the entrainment. We worked on several synthetic mixtures, defined according to the grain size distribution, clay mineralogy and water content with either freshwater or sea water. The grain size distribution is simplified but matches those of sediment cores from different subduction zones. For each mixture, we built matrices of the erosion rates according to the flow velocities, which shows the role of water content and vertical shaking. We have also identifi ed different mechanism during the runs:grain-by-grain or clasts entrainment, stripping, motion of the sediment interface, and formation of a dense sediment layer above the surface. These observations maybe recorded in the associated deposit, suggesting different fingerprinting by the tsunamigenic earthquakes depending on the characteristics of each subduction zone. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 9, 2025