Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2024

Presentation information

[E] Oral

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

[S-CG40] Science of slow-to-fast earthquakes

Wed. May 29, 2024 3:30 PM - 4:45 PM Convention Hall (CH-B) (International Conference Hall, Makuhari Messe)

convener:Aitaro Kato(Earthquake Research Institute, the University of Tokyo), Asuka Yamaguchi(Atomosphere and Ocean Research Institute, The University of Tokyo), Yohei Hamada(Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology), Akemi Noda(Meteorological Research Institute, Japan Meteorological Agency), Chairperson:Satoshi Ide(Department of Earth an Planetary Science, University of Tokyo), Saeko Kita(International Institute of Seismology and Earthquake Engineering, BRI)

3:30 PM - 3:45 PM

[SCG40-36] Spatiotemporal characteristics of tectonic tremors in the collisional orogen of Taiwan

*Satoshi Ide1, Kate Huihsuan Chen2 (1.Department of Earth an Planetary Science, University of Tokyo, 2.National Taiwan Normal University)

Keywords:Tectonic tremor, Taiwan, Slow earthquake

Taiwan offers a distinctive tectonic setting as a collisional orogen, ideal for studying tectonic tremors and the slow deformation process in the mountain-building process. Using continuous seismic data at many stations, which have become available recently, and employing the envelope correlation method, we detected ~7000 tremor events from 2012 to 2022, with waveform characteristics similar to tectonic tremors worldwide. Beyond the previously known tremor zone beneath the southern Central Range, where newly detected tremors align along a low-angle thrust plane, we identified several new tremor “hotspots” spanning 200 km along the mountain belt. These hotspots are situated at the termination of the subducting slabs and around the deep (25-50 km) extension of the Central Range fault, where repeating earthquakes occur at a depth of 10-25 km. Our findings suggest a strong linkage between the tremor generation mechanism and the mountain-building process, potentially influenced by underground fluid and temperature anomalies.