*Atsushi Yamaji1 (1.Division of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University)
Session information
[EE] Poster
S (Solid Earth Sciences) » S-IT Science of the Earth's Interior & Tectonophysics
[S-IT24] [EE] Stress geomechanics integrations: Observations, Modelings and Implications (OMI)
Wed. May 24, 2017 10:45 AM - 12:15 PM Poster Hall (International Exhibition Hall HALL7)
convener:HungYu Wu(Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology), Masataka Kinoshita(Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo), Ayumu Miyakawa(Institute of Geology and Geoinformation (IGG), Geological Survey of Japan, AIST), Hsin-Hua Huang(Institute of Earth Sciences, Academia Sinica)
Stress geomechanics specifies how rocks respond to strain, fluid and heat that provide essential information on understanding seismic behaviors. Thus, some outreach researches address the stress state in the geological structures or along plate boundaries through geophysical, geodetic, geothermal and/or hydrological approaches, especially after recently great earthquakes. Such studies have raised the importance on the stress analysis, including stress evolution by seismic and volcanic activity, in-situ stress measurements, crust heterogeneity, and geodetic modeling for earthquake cycle. This session is to bring the multi-disciplinary studies together on stress geomechanics, including but not limited, to inland/ocean drilling, borehole measurement, focal mechanism of crustal and volcanic earthquakes, subsurface anisotropy analysis and geomechanical model applications. We focus our discussion not only on the observation in association with physical models, but also interdisciplinary cooperation in each research field.
*wakamori kei1, Atsushi Yamaji1, Katsumasa Yamanaka1, Katsushi Sato1 (1.Division of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Guraduate school of Science, Kyoto University)
*Yen-Yu Lin1, Nadia Lapusta2,1 (1.CalTech Seismological Laboratory, 2.CalTech Mechanical and Civil Engineering)
*Liqing Jiao1, Chung-Han Chan1, Paul Tapponnier1 (1.Earth Observatory of Singapore, Nanyang Technological University)
*Nikita Dubinya1 (1.The Schmidt Institute of Physics of the Earth of the Russian Academy of Sciences)