It was known earlier as the Yandanooka–Cape Riche Lineament,[4] including the physiographic boundary known as the Meckering Line, and also the junction between Swanland[clarification needed] and Salinaland[clarification needed].[5][6]
The zone exists within an Archaean Shield structure called the Yilgarn Block.[7] The identified geological subdivisions within this Precambrian structure do not show an obvious relation to the seismicity.[8]
The zone represents a significant seismic hazard to Perth.[2] More than six thousand earthquakes have occurred in the SWSZ in the years 1968 – 2002.[8]Meckering, Cadoux and Burakin earthquakes originated in the SWSZ. More recent events have occurred to the south in Lake Muir in 2018[9][10][11][12] and Arthur River in 2022.[13]
The zone and the explanation of it, has been titled Perthquake in the Catalyst programme on the ABC in 2001.[14]
Temporal variation of the events in the region have been analysed over time.[15][16]
In the 2000s, monitoring and instrumentation was developed in the region.[17][18]
Notes
^First named by H.A.Doyle (1971) Seismicity and Structure in Australia Royal Society of New Zealand Bulletin Vol.9 pp. 149–152
^ abLeonard, M; Darby, D; Hu, G (2007). GPS-geodetic monitoring of the South West Seismic Zone of Western Australia: progress after two observation epochs in 2002 and 2006(PDF). Australian Earthquake Engineering Society 2007, Wollongong. Archived(PDF) from the original on 20 July 2008. Retrieved 2 June 2019. The Australian southwest seismic zone (SWSZ) is a north-south trending belt of intra-plate earthquake activity that occurs in the southwest of Western Australia, bounded by 30.5°S to 32.5°S and 115.5°E to 118°E. This is one of the most seismically active areas in Australia, with nine earthquakes over magnitude 5.0 occurring between 1968 and 2002; the largest of these was the M6.8 Meckering earthquake in 1968. Since the SWSZ lies as close as ~150 km from the ~1.4 million population of the Perth region, it poses a distinct seismic hazard.
^Featherstone, W.E; Penna, N.T; Leonard, M; Clark, D; Dawson, J; Dentith, Mike; Darby, D; Mccarthy, R (2004), GPS-geodetic deformation monitoring of the south-west seismic zone of Western Australia : review, description of methodology and results from epoch-one, ISSN0035-922X
^Geological Survey of Western Australia (1975), The Geology of Western Australia, Western Australia Geological Survey, ISBN978-0-7244-6084-7 – section Southwestern Province by I.R. Williams page 65
^Geological Survey of Western Australia (1975), The Geology of Western Australia, Western Australia Geological Survey, ISBN978-0-7244-6084-7 – section Yilgarn Block by I.R. Williams pages 33–81 – now called Yilgarn Craton
^Geological Society of Australia. Specialist Group on Solid-Earth Geophysics (3 June 1996), "Crustal Structure In The Southwest Yilgarn Craton, Western Australia – An Explanation For The Southwest Seismic Zone? (3 June 1996)", Geophysics Down Under: Newsletter of the Specialist Group on Solid-Earth Geophysics (23), Geological Society of Australia. Specialist Group on Solid-Earth Geophysics: 4, ISSN1035-0853
^
Dent, Victor; Harris, P; Hardy, D (2010), A new seismograph network in the southwest seismic zone of Western Australia, Australian Earthquake Engineering Society, ISBN978-0-9807420-2-2
Featherstone, Will (1998) Geodetic monitoring of the South West Seismic Zone paper at Curtin University of Technology 24 25 September 1998 to the Advances in Deformation Monitoring International Workshop