JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting 2020

講演情報

[E] 口頭発表

セッション記号 S (固体地球科学) » S-IT 地球内部科学・地球惑星テクトニクス

[S-IT27] Oceanic lithosphere and asthenosphere

コンビーナ:竹内 希(東京大学地震研究所)、Ban-Yuan Kuo(Institute of Earth Sciences, Academia Sinica)、Rob L Evans(Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)、Younghee Kim(Seoul National University)

[SIT27-03] The seismic structure of the oldest Pacific: Preliminary results from the broadband Rayleigh-wave dispersion analysis of the Pacific Array, Oldest-1

*川野 由貴1一瀬 建日1竹尾 明子1川勝 均1塩原 肇1竹内 希1杉岡 裕子2Kim YoungHee3歌田 久司1Lee Sang-Mook3 (1.東京大学地震研究所、2.神戸大学理学研究科惑星学専攻、3.Seoul National University)

キーワード:Lithosphere-asthenosphere system、Pacific Array、Broadband ocean bottom seismometer、Broadband dispersion analysis

The international collaborative initiative, the Pacific Array, was launched in 2018. One of the aims of this initiative is to reveal the evolution process of the Pacific plate. To achieve this goal, the Oldest-1 array, situated on the 170 Ma seafloor of the Pacific Ocean off the Mariana trench, plays an essential role since its lithosphere-asthenosphere system is considered to record the entire evolution process of the Pacific plate from its birth to present. In November 2018, the Japan–South Korea joint team deployed 12 broadband ocean bottom seismometers and 7 ocean bottom electro-magnetometers that were successfully recovered a year later. We present the initial result of the seismic analysis of the uppermost mantle structure revealed by the Oldest-1 array via the broadband Rayleigh-wave dispersion analysis. At short periods (<30 s), we measure fundamental-mode and first-overtone Rayleigh-wave phase velocities using ambient noise cross-correlations. At long periods (>30 s), we measure the teleseismic Rayleigh-wave phase velocities. We then invert the broadband dispersion curves for a one-dimensional isotropic βv (Vsv) structure. A preliminary result using tilt-noise corrected data indicates that the structure shallower than 150 km is similar to the one obtained for the 140 Ma Northwestern Pacific seafloor by the NOMan project (Takeo et al., 2018, G-Cubed). We plan to incorporate compliance-noise corrected data for the teleseismic analysis of the deeper structure, as well as to measure azimuthal anisotropy.