The 20 December 2010 M
6.3 earthquake near Rigan in southeastern
Iran occurred on a previously unknown active fault in the southern Lut block. Its position
was inferred by Walker et al. (2013) using Interferometric Synthetic Aperture
Radar and the analysis of aftershocks recorded by the two permanent seismological
networks in Iran. In this article, we analyze previously unavailable data from six temporary
stations deployed immediately after the 2010 Rigan earthquake. We locate the
aftershock sequence using two techniques: (1) a time-reversal method of our own,
derived from the Waveloc algorithm of Langet et al. (2014) and (2) the NonLinLoc
algorithm of Lomax et al. (2000). We detect more than 3900 events over the 7-day
period of the deployment, 46 of which we consider to be well constrained. Our locations
lie on a northeast–southwest trend that corroborates the inferred fault location
and provides further evidence of the presence of this hidden fault in the southern Lut
block. The occurrence of hidden faults in this tectonically active region suggests that a
re-evaluation of local and regional seismic hazard may be necessary.