3:30 PM - 3:45 PM
[SCG44-07] Offshore tremor activities in relation to a slow slip event around the plate coupling transition zone in the central part of the Hikurangi subduction margin, New Zealand
Keywords:Tectonic tremor, Slow slip event, Plate coupling
The last SSE around the transition zone before our recent observation and research project, PULSE (Physically Understanding Localised Slip Episodicity), occurred in 2016. We deployed 5 short-period and 5 broadband ocean bottom seismometers (OBS) for a one year offshore observation in October 2020, aiming to capture the next occurrence of slow slip and accompanying seismicity in this transition region. During the deployment, in May 2021, an SSE occurred to the north of the plate coupling transition zone directly beneath the OBS network. We successfully recovered all OBSs in October 2021. Good quality data were obtained at all OBS stations. The OBS data revealed two sequences of tremor activities in relation to the SSE. The first sequence appears to have started in February 2021, about three months before the SSE, and the activity became most intense at the end of March, stopping in mid-April. The second sequence appears to be coincident with the SSE, but the intensity appears much weaker than the first sequence. There may have been migrations of tremor locations in both along-strike and along-dip directions, and the locking transition boundary appears to have acted as a physical barrier to migrating tremor activity.