10:45 AM - 11:00 AM
[HSC16-06] Active Fault Research during the last 30 years and the social problem
Keywords:Active fault, Research history, Social problem
The purpose of this presentation is to review the social problems following the active fault research history of the recent 30 years.
1. Introduction: The remarkable year of 1980
2. 1980-1994: The matured period of active fault studies during seismic calm
2.1. Excavation study of active faults
2.2. Analytical study of tectonic landform evolution based on dislocation models
2.3. Chronological studies supported by the development of dating techniques
2.4. Quantifying the rate of crustal deformation
2.5. Applied study to disaster reduction problem
3. 1995-2005: The decade after the great Kobe earthquake
3.1. Intensive investigation of active faults
3.2. Detailed large-scale mapping of active faults
3.3. Seismic reflection profiling of active fault
3.4. Long-term forecast of earthquake occurrence by active faults
3.5 Detailed study of flexural deformation and the 2004 Mid-Niigata earthquake
3.6. Overseas research on big earthquakes and active faults
4. 2006-2012: The period of rediscovery of active faults
4.1. Evaluating varieties of relation between earthquakes and active faults
4.2. Reexamination of active fault distribution
4.3. Relations between active faulting and geodetical movement
4.4. Considering interplate earthquake from the view point of submarine active fault
4.5. Question posed by the 2011 East Japan huge earthquake
5. Conclusions
Suzuki(2013): Active Fault Studies in Japan after 1980. Geographical Review of Japan Series B, 86, 6–21.