Most of the major crustal faults found in the overriding Aleutian island arc are pre-Pleistocene, although precise dating has not been achieved. Along the megathrust, there were 5 earthquakes that were greater than magnitude 8 in the Aleutian subduction zone within the past 80+ years : M= 8.2 Shumagin Islands in 1938,
M= 8.6 Andreanof Islands in 1957,
M= 9.2 Good Friday in 1964,
M= 8.7 Rat Islands in 1965, and
M= 8.2 near Perryville in 2021 . Tremor and slow-slip earthquakes have also been observed in the Aleutian subduction zone. The low frequency earthquake (LFE) hypocenters associated with these processes are located near Kodiak Island, Shumagin Gap, Unalaska, and the Andreanof Islands, down-dip of these great megathrust events, where the two converging plates are thought to be at least partially locked. The thickness of sedimentation in the trench does not have a correlation with presence of tremor. For example, there is ~1 km-thick late Quaternary-Holocene sediment underneath Kodiak, and ~ 200 m-thick sediment underneath the Andreanof Islands. Kodiak Island had LFE epicenters at depths of 45–60 km while Andreanof Islands had epicenters at ~60–70 km depths. However, tremor does seem to occur at a specific depth related to the age of the subducting plate. The age of the subducting plate is older towards west (Andreanof Island) where LFEs occur at greater depths (~75 km) than in the east where the plate is younger (~45 km near Kodiak Island). This may be because the depths at which the hydrous minerals release water and produce tremors are greater when the plate is older, colder, and subducting faster. == References ==