日本地球惑星科学連合2025年大会

講演情報

[J] ポスター発表

セッション記号 S (固体地球科学) » S-CG 固体地球科学複合領域・一般

[S-CG61] 変動帯ダイナミクス

2025年5月28日(水) 17:15 〜 19:15 ポスター会場 (幕張メッセ国際展示場 7・8ホール)

コンビーナ:深畑 幸俊(京都大学防災研究所)、岩森 光(東京大学・地震研究所)、大橋 聖和((国研)産業技術総合研究所)

17:15 〜 19:15

[SCG61-P01] 青森県陸奥湾の地震とS波スプリッティング解析

*岡田 知己1、Savage Martha2藤村 遼太郎1内田 晴海1田上 綾香3、木村 洲徳1高木 涼太1前田 純伶4前田 拓人5野口 科子6阿部 信太郎6 (1.東北大学大学院理学研究科附属地震・噴火予知研究観測センター、2.Victoria University of Wellington、3.北海道大学、4.産業総合技術研究所、5.弘前大学、6.公益財団法人 地震予知総合研究振興会)

Introduction

In the northern part of Honshu, there are several volcanoes and high seismicity occurs. Also, there are faults with strikes of about N-S onshore (in the Natsudomari Peninsula and Shimokita Peninsula). In November 2024, some M4-5 earthquakes occurred in Mutsu Bay. It is unclear whether this recent swarm seismicity is related to faults or volcanic activity beneath the bay.
In an anisotropic media with the preferred orientation of cracks under the differential stress field or structure controlled by faulting, the shear wave splits into two shear waves: a fast shear wave oriented to maximum horizontal stress orientation (SHmax) or fault strike and deformation axis. This study investigates the shear wave splitting in this area and discusses the stress field (e.g., Maeda et al., 2007), fault distribution, and seismicity.

Data and Method

Data are from the unified earthquake catalog by the Japan Meteorological Agency. The analysis period is from 2020 to 2024. We adopted MFAST (Savage et al., 2010) to measure shear wave splitting in the waveform from local seismicity in the area. To obtain the spatial average of fast shear wave oscillation azimuth (FSOA), we used TESSA (Johnson et al., 2011).

Results and discussion

The dominant azimuth of FSOA in the southern and eastern parts of the bay and its surrounding onshore was N-S or NNW-SSE. This azimuth almost corresponds to the fault and anticline strike in onshore Natsudomari and Shimokita Peninsulas, not the SHmax azimuth of about E-W in the corresponding regions C and S of Maeda et al. (2007). This supports that there are several faults and high deformation (e.g., Abe, Tokuyama, and Sakai, Proceeding of the SEGJ Conference, 2002), and it may be supposed the recent seismicity is related to faults beneath the bay.