2:30 PM - 2:45 PM
[SCG44-04] Microseismicity associating tectonic tremor bursts in the northern Japan Trench
Keywords:tectonic tremor, repeating earthquake, OBS
We used P and S arrival times to relocate hypocenters of earthquakes, identified as events with duration shorter than 20 s by an envelope correlation method by Takahashi et al. [2021] using seismograms of 47 short period OBSs in the area from October 2007 to June 2008. The number of relocated earthquakes was 3409 and the smallest event size was M -0.4. It was confirmed that most of the tremor swarms, identified by Takahashi et al. [2021] during the observation period, were accompanied by ordinary earthquakes in their vicinities.
Among the tremor-earthquake aggregates, we discovered an interesting interplay of tremors and earthquakes, in which an earthquake swarm activity concentrated at a small area separating two tremor swarms. The activity started with sudden activation of tremors, followed by an increase of seismicity including a couple of pairs of small repeating earthquakes of M 0.8 ~ 1.0 in sizes. The M-T change during the seismicity suggests that this activity is more like a swarm type than a mainshock-aftershock type. These characteristics suggest that an aseismic slip may be involved in this tremor-earthquake activity. In the southern Japan Trench, it has been reported that ordinary earthquakes occurred along the trajectories of the preceding tremor migrations [Obana et al. 2021]. In the northern part of the Japan Trench, we found that the spatio-temporal evolution of the tremor and ordinary earthquake activity follows similar pattern to those in the southern part, suggesting a common feature of slow earthquakes behaviors along the Japan Trench.