Investigation on the Postseismic Deformation Associated with the 2011 Tohoku Earthquake Based on Terrestrial and Seafloor Geodetic Observations: To Evaluate the Further Seismic Hazard Potential on the Plate Interface Beneath the Northeastern Japanese Islands
2015; Springer Nature; Linguagem: Inglês
10.1007/1345_2015_162
ISSN2197-9359
AutoresTakeshi Iinuma, Ryota Hino, Motoyuki Kido, Yukihito Osada, Daisuke Inazu, Yoshihiro Ito, Syuichi Suzuki, Yusaku Ohta, Hiromi Fujimoto,
Tópico(s)GNSS positioning and interference
ResumoThe 2011 Tohoku Earthquake (M9.0), which occurred on the plate boundary between the subducting Pacific plate and continental plate has been associated with postseismic deformation, including aseismic slip at the plate interface (postseismic slip). In order to evaluate the potential for further seismic activity, we investigated the spatial and temporal evolution of the postseismic slip based not only on terrestrial GPS data but also on seafloor geodetic data. We estimated the displacements due to the postseismic slip by subtracting the displacements due to large aftershocks and viscoelastic relaxation from the original displacement time series data and used a time-dependent inversion method to estimate the postseismic slip distributions. The resultant postseismic slip distributions depend strongly on the assumed value of the viscosity. However, the following two features are independent of the viscosity assumption: (1) large postseismic slip has been occurring at a very shallow ( ≤ 20 km in depth) portion of the plate interface south of the area of huge coseismic slip and (2) significant postseismic slip has occurred at a deep (approximately 50 km in depth) portion of the plate interface. The results suggest that the elastic strain and the stress concentrated at the plate interface at a depth of approximately 30 km in the segment off the Boso Peninsula have not yet been released and continue to generate large aftershocks.
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