IAG-IASPEI 2017

Presentation information

Oral

Joint Symposia » J03. Deformation of the lithosphere: Integrating seismology and geodesy through modelling

[J03-1] Deformation of the lithosphere: Integrating seismology and geodesy through modelling I

Mon. Jul 31, 2017 8:30 AM - 10:00 AM Room 401 (Kobe International Conference Center 4F, Room 401)

Chairs: Rob Govers (Utrecht University) , Kevin Furlong (Penn State University)

8:30 AM - 9:00 AM

[J03-1-01] Pre-, Co-, and Post-seismic deformation of the 2016 Oct 21th M 6.6 Central Tottori earthquake

Takuya Nishimura, Manabu Hashimoto, Yoshinobu Hoso, Hiromu Sakaue, Yuji Ito (Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan)

invited

There is a zone of active microseismicity along the Japan Sea coast in the San'in region, southwest Japan. Some large earthquakes including the 1943 M7.2 Tottori and the 2000 M7.3 western Tottori earthquakes also occurred in this seismic zone. Nishimura et al.(2014) showed a zone of high strain rate observed by GNSS almost overlapped the seismic zone and proposed to call it “the San'in shear zone".

We constructed 13 continuous GNSS stations in late 2014 so as to clarify a detailed distribution of the San'in shear zone. These stations constitute three linear arrays across the shear zone. An M 6.6 earthquake hit central Tottori prefecture on October 21, 2016. Our GNSS network, as well as GEONET revealed a detailed pattern of crustal deformation before, during, and after the earthquake. We report the deformation observed by GNSS and InSAR.

Deformation in the San'in shear zone is characterized by right-lateral shear movements. The 20-km-wide shear zone extends in an east-west direction and accommodates 5 mm/yr of shear movements. The M6.6 earthquake occurred in the shear zone.

Coseismic displacement was observed at our GNSS stations. The largest horizontal displacement is 9 cm toward east-southeast and the largest vertical one is subsidence of 4 cm. We estimate parameters of a rectangular fault model using the observed displacement. The estimated parameters suggest a vertical fault oriented NWN-SES with left-lateral strike slip, which is concordant with aftershock distribution. The estimated moment magnitude is ~6.2. SAR interferograms of ALOS-2 show a clear quadratic pattern of surface coseismic displacement.

Postseismic displacement at GNSS stations reached 2 cm as of end of December, 2016. Although a spatial pattern of postseismic displacement is similar to that of the coseismic displacement, observed postseismic displacement is concentrated near the source fault. It suggests shallow afterslip along the coseismic fault.