Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2018

Presentation information

[EJ] Oral

S (Solid Earth Sciences) » S-CG Complex & General

[S-CG59] Structure and evolution of Japanese islands - Formation of island arc systems and earthquake cycles

Tue. May 22, 2018 9:00 AM - 10:30 AM A05 (Tokyo Bay Makuhari Hall)

convener:Hiroshi Sato(Earthquake Prediction Research Center, Earthquake Research Institute, The University of Tokyo), Masanao Shinohara(Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo), Masahiro Ishikawa(横浜国立大学大学院環境情報研究院, 共同), Makoto MATSUBARA(National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Resilience), Chairperson:Shinohara Masanao(Earthquake Research Institute, The University of Tokyo), Ishikawa Masahiro(Yokohama National University)

10:15 AM - 10:30 AM

[SCG59-06] Active Tectonics of the frontal Hidaka fold-and-thrust belt in the Ishikari foreland basin based on deep to shallow seismic reflection profiling, Hokkaido, Japan

*Tatsuya Ishiyama1, Hiroshi Sato1, Naoko Kato1, Susumu Abe2 (1.Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo, 2.Japan Petroleum Exploration Co., Ltd.)

Keywords:Active fault , Hidaka fold-and-thrust belt, Blind thrust, Active fold, Seismic reflection profile, Hokkaido

We define structural characters of shallow to deep subsurface geometry of underlying blind thrust fault systems that comprise the frontal portion of the Hidaka fold-and-thrust belt (HFTB), Hokkaido, based on newly collected, deep (Sato et al., 2018) and shallow (Ishiyama et al., 2018; Kato et al., 2018) onshore high-resolution two dimensional (2D) seismic reflection and refraction data across the Ishikari plain. Coupled with middle to late Pleistocene geomorphic and geologic signatures of their structural growth and fault activity, we also estimate recent rates of fault slips and associated crustal shortening on the frontal blind thrust systems. Processed deep seismic profile and its preliminary interpretation illuminated up to 10 km depth of structures of the leading edge of the fold-and-thrust belt in the foreland basin, including active blind thrust-related folds at shallower structural levels beneath the Ishikari plain and Umaoi Hills. New shallow seismic reflection profiles tied with Neogene stratigraphy are also useful to define shallowly to moderately east-dipping blind thrust faults and pairs of overlying fault-related anticlines that deform Pleistocene to Pliocene sedimentary units, of which northern extension is manifested by folded late Pleistocene marine terrace deposits. We will mainly discuss (1) present fault slip rates on the frontal part of the HFTB by linking shallow to deep thrust trajectories with active folding recorded by marine and fluvial terraces, (2) comparison between the present and millennial longer-term fault slip rates across the HFTB, and its implications for (3) tectonic history of its structural growth, (4) styles of strain accommodation within the frontal HFTB, and (5) plate tectonic setting in this arc-arc collision system.