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Geodetic measurement of horizontal strain across the Red River fault near Thac Ba, Vietnam, 1963–1994

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Abstract.

Geodetic measurements from 1963 through 1994 are used to estimate horizontal strain rates across the Red River fault near Thac Ba, Vietnam. Whether or not this fault system is currently active is a subject of some debate. By combining: (1) triangulation from 1963, (2) triangulation in 1983, and (3) Global Positioning System (GPS) observations in 1994, horizontal shear strain rates are estimated without imposing any prior information on fixed stations. The estimated rates of shear strain in ten triangular subnetworks surrounding the fault trace are not significantly different from zero at 95% confidence. The maximum rate of dextral shear is less than 0.3 μrad/year in all but one of the triangles. The estimates help bound the slip rate in a simple elastic dislocation model for a locked, vertical strike-slip fault. By assuming a locking depth of 5–20 km, the most likely values for the deep slip rate are between 1 and 5 mm/year of right-lateral motion. These values delimit the 23% confidence interval. At 95% confidence, the slip rate estimate falls between 7 mm/year of left-lateral motion and 15 mm/year of right-lateral motion.

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Received: 18 November 1997 / Accepted: 28 January 1999

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Cong, D., Feigl, K. Geodetic measurement of horizontal strain across the Red River fault near Thac Ba, Vietnam, 1963–1994. Journal of Geodesy 73, 298–310 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/s001900050247

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s001900050247

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