日本地球惑星科学連合2022年大会

講演情報

[J] 口頭発表

セッション記号 S (固体地球科学) » S-CG 固体地球科学複合領域・一般

[S-CG56] 沈み込み帯へのインプット:海洋プレートの実態とその進化

2022年5月26日(木) 09:00 〜 10:30 101 (幕張メッセ国際会議場)

コンビーナ:藤江 剛(海洋研究開発機構)、コンビーナ:山野 誠(東京大学地震研究所)、森下 知晃(金沢大学理工研究域地球社会基盤学系)、コンビーナ:鹿児島 渉悟(富山大学)、座長:鹿児島 渉悟(富山大学)、山野 誠(東京大学地震研究所)

10:05 〜 10:30

[SCG56-05] 日本海溝-千島海溝域海溝海側における断層マッピングと津波評価

★招待講演

*小平 秀一1中村 恭之1野 徹雄1藤江 剛1尾鼻 浩一郎1三浦 誠一1馬場 俊孝2近貞 直孝3今井 健太郎1谷岡 勇市郎4 (1.海洋研究開発機構 海域地震火山部門、2.徳島大学大学院 社会産業理工学研究部、3.防災科学技術研究所 地震津波防災研究部門、4.北海道大学大学院理学研究院 地震火山観測研究センター)

キーワード:海溝海側、日本海溝、千島海溝、seismic imaging、津波

Shallow intraplate earthquakes became active in the outer-trench region when a large shallow megathrust earthquake occurred. In some cases, a great normal fault earthquake was observed following a great shallow megathrust earthquake near the trench. The 1933 Showa-Sanriku outer-trench normal fault earthquake (Mw 8.6) following the 1896 Meiji-Sanriku megathrust earthquake (M ~ 8.5) in the Japan Trench are recognized as a pair of those earthquakes. As a general idea, it is proposed that a normal fault earthquake occurs following a large shallow megathrust earthquake when extensional stress from subducting plate is transmitted to the outer trench region. Looking at the Japan Trench after the 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake, the seismicity in the outer-trench region is still higher than before at 11 years after the earthquake. According to the GPS-acoustic monitoring in the fore-arc, westward seafloor displacements are observed in the main rupture zone of the Tohoku-Oki earthquake, which is interpreted to be due to viscoelastic relaxation of the oceanic mantle. These observations suggest the need to prepare for a large normal-fault earthquake in the outer-trench region of the Japan Trench. However, because there was little information on outer-trench earthquake faults' structure, geometry, and activity, it was challenging to assess outer-trench earthquakes and tsunamis based on detailed observation data. To address this issue, we conducted a project on mapping the potential fault of a large normal fault in the Japan Trench and tsunami assessment based on the fault map. This project was an integrated research project consisting of large-scale plate imaging, fault imaging by seismic reflection data, earthquake monitoring, bathymetry mapping, and tsunami simulation. As a result of the project, we constructed the map of the potential fault of the large normal fault earthquake (M>7.5) from off Aomori to off Fukushima and simulated tsunami waveform along the coast and the S-net stations. The fault map shows that i) the most of the faults are imaged as high-angle normal faults (dip angle of higher than 45 degree), ii) the seismic reflection images do not show clear reflectors along the faults but show lateral discontinuity of the Moho reflection at the presumed intersection of the Moho of the fault, and iii) lineation of the seismicity down to uppermost mantle is mapped along the fault. One of the crucial findings from the tsunami simulation is that the tsunami waveform calculated from one of the mapped faults explains well with the observed tsunami waveform of the 1933 Showa-Sanriku earthquake. Following the Japan Trench outer-trench project, from 2020, we have started a new project for potential fault mapping and tsunami assessment of the outer-trench region off Hokkaido in the southern Kuril trench. In this project, we map potential faults such as strike, dip, and displacement in the area from the Erimo Seamount to the Nosappu rift zone based on bathymetry and reflection survey data, and tsunami assessment based on the geophysical information. In this presentation, we review the results of the Japan Trench outer-trench project and present the preliminary results of the Kuril Trench project. This work is supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number 15H05718 and 20H00294.