日本地球惑星科学連合2025年大会

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[J] 口頭発表

セッション記号 S (固体地球科学) » S-SS 地震学

[S-SS11] 強震動・地震災害

2025年5月30日(金) 09:00 〜 10:30 コンベンションホール (CH-B) (幕張メッセ国際会議場)

コンビーナ:久保 久彦(国立研究開発法人防災科学技術研究所)、友澤 裕介(鹿島建設)、座長:香川 敬生(鳥取大学工学部)、浅野 公之(京都大学防災研究所)

10:15 〜 10:30

[SSS11-11] Determination of Site Effects in Antakya Basin, Turkey from Microtremor and Aftershocks from 6th February 2023 Earthquake

*Oguz Ozel1Hiroaki Yamanaka2Seiji Tsuno2Nobuo Takai3、Mehmet Safa Arslan5、Deniz Caka6、Pinar Duran1Masayuki Yoshimi4 (1.Istanbul Unlversity-Cerrahpasa、2.Tokyo Institute of Technology.、3.Hokkaido University.、4.Japan Geological Survey.、5.Erzincan University.、6.Kocaeli University.)

キーワード:Earthquake Kahramanmaras., The Antakya Basin., Spectral ratio, Basin Amplification

Following the February 6 Kahramanmaras earthquakes, a collaborative project was initiated in March 2023 by researchers from Istanbul University-Cerrahpasa, Kocaeli University, and Middle East Technical University, in partnership with Tokyo Institute of Technology, Hokkaido University, Japan Railways Research Center, and Japan Geological Institute under the J-Rapid project. This project has now been completed. As part of the study, 21 accelerometer stations were deployed across Kahramanmaras, Adiyaman, Pazarcik, Iskenderun, Antakya, and Samandag, regions severely affected by the earthquakes. These stations continuously recorded aftershocks from March to September 2023. The primary objective was to investigate site effects, correlate seismic responses with damage distribution, determine the 1D S-wave velocity structure, and assess ground response through joint analysis of recorded earthquakes, microtremor measurements, and vertical electrical sounding. Based on the first three months of data, an article was submitted by Japanese researchers to Seismological Research Letters (SRL). To further these investigations, an additional field study is scheduled from September 2023 to February 2024. During this phase, accelerometers in Adiyaman, Pazarcik, Kahramanmaras, and Iskenderun will be relocated to Antakya’s central district. Preliminary analysis of Peak Ground Acceleration (PGA) for the M 7.7 and M 7.6 earthquakes revealed significant amplification as seismic waves propagated into the Antakya Basin, while acceleration diminished with increasing distance from the epicenter (see AFAD Earthquake Department Strong Motion records). These findings suggest that the Basin Effect played a crucial role in the extensive damage observed in Antakya. Therefore, the next phase of the study will focus on the Antakya Basin. As a continuation of the 1002-C project, research will resume with the same Japanese team on September 25, 2023, under the newly proposed 1002-B project.