09:15 〜 09:30
[SCG46-02] Stress estimation on the Japan Trench Plate Boundary Fault 13 years after the 2011 Tohoku-oki Earthquake
★Invited Papers
キーワード:IODP, JTRACK, stress evolution with time, fault strength, seismic cycle
In 2012, the International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) exp. 343 JFAST successfully drilled the plate boundary fault zone that ruptured during the Mw9.1 Tohoku-oki earthquake, and recorded the stress state in the upper plate 11 months after the megathrust rupture. Results revealed a stress regime in favor of normal faulting, indicating a near total stress drop in this specific zone that recorded 50 m of slip (Lin et al., 2013; Brodsky et al., 2017). 12 years after JFAST, the IODP Expedition 405 (JTRACK) successfully re drilled the plate boundary at the same site, providing an unprecedented evaluation of stress evolution with time after a megaquake. New measurements reveal that the stress state is still in a low deviatoric stress and in a normal faulting regime and show evidence of aseismic slip on the fault, despite the ongoing plate convergence. Along strike observations of reverse faulting aftershocks indicate variability in stress and strength recovery in the margin. Together those results suggest this portion of the fault experiences low secular loading or is within a stress shadow of a locked patch, while it supports low stress.