This is the data generated in the paper: "Seismological evidence for a multifault network at the subduction interface".
Paper abstract:
Subduction zones generate the largest earthquakes on Earth, yet their detailed structure, and its influence on seismic and aseismic slip, remains poorly understood. Geological studies of fossil subduction zones characterize the seismogenic interface as a 100m-1km thick zone1–3 within which deformation occurs mostly on meters-thick faults1,3–6. Conversely, seismological studies, with their larger spatial coverage and temporal resolution but lower spatial resolution, often image the seismogenic interface as a kilometers-wide band of seismicity7. Thus, how and when these meter-scale structures are active at the seismic-cycle timescale, and what influence they have on deformation is not known. Here, we detect these meters-thick faults with seismicity and show their influence on afterslip propagation. Using a local 3D velocity model and dense observations of over 1500 double-difference relocated earthquakes in Ecuador, we obtain an exceptionally detailed image of seismicity, showing that earthquakes occur sometimes on a single plane and sometimes on multiple meters-thick simultaneously active subparallel planes within the plate interface zone. This geometrical complexity impacts afterslip propagation, demonstrating the influence of fault continuity and structure on slip at the seismogenic interface. Our findings can therefore help create more realistic models of earthquake rupture, aseismic slip, and earthquake hazard in subduction zones.