日本地球惑星科学連合2018年大会

講演情報

[EJ] 口頭発表

セッション記号 S (固体地球科学) » S-SS 地震学

[S-SS09] 地殻変動

2018年5月20日(日) 13:45 〜 15:15 コンベンションホールB(CH-B) (幕張メッセ国際会議場 2F)

コンビーナ:落 唯史(国立研究開発法人産業技術総合研究所 地質調査総合センター 活断層・火山研究部門)、大園 真子(北海道大学大学院理学研究院附属地震火山研究観測センター)、座長:山崎 雅三井 雄太

14:45 〜 15:00

[SSS09-05] 屈斜路カルデラ下の低粘性領域

*山崎 雅1小林 知勝2 (1.産業技術総合研究所地質調査総合センター、2.国土地理院)

Geodetically observed volcano deformation has been analysed in terms either of elastic or viscoelastic crustal rheology, for which the presence of a magma has usually been considered as a deformation source. In rheological viewpoint, however, a magma is presumable to be a low viscosity material. This would allow us to detect a magma body as a zone that has rheologically less strength. In Yamasaki et al. (2018, J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res., 349, 128-145), a spatially invariable crustal viscosity was constrained to be ~4x1017 Pa s from the crustal deformation observed in the Kutcharo caldera, implying the presence of a magma effectively lowers the averaged viscosity value of the crust. In the present study, using a 3-D finite element model that an elastic layer is underlain by a viscoelastic layer, we attempt to constrain a first-ordered spatial viscosity variation in the crust beneath the Kutcharo caldera from geodetic data. In the viscoelastic layer, a low viscosity zone (LVZ), whose spatially uniform viscosity is hl and whose thickness and width are Q and R, respectively, is superimposed on a background crust that has a spatially uniform viscosity hc = 1019 Pa s. The emplacement of a sill, introduced as a deformation source into the model, is assumed to occur in the same way as that constrained in Yamasaki et al. (2018). The numerical experiment has found that the post-inflation subsidence is well explained in terms of viscoelastic relaxation in LVZ, if the LVZ configuration is characterised as: (1) hl = ~4-5x1017 Pa s, (2) zl = 5 km, the top surface of LVZ is immediately below the elastic layer with a thickness of 5 km, (3) Q > ~15 km and (4) R > ~10 km. Such a LVZ may represent the influence from a magma chamber, providing mechanical aspect on geophysically imaged crustal structure beneath the caldera. Our results suggest that the presence of a magma may possibly be detectable from the surface deformation after a magmatic injection into the uppermost crust.