TY - JOUR
T1 - Rupture directivity, stress drop, and hypocenter migration of small earthquakes in the Yamagata-Fukushima border swarm triggered by upward pore-pressure migration after the 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake
AU - Yoshida, Keisuke
AU - Saito, Tatsuhiko
AU - Emoto, Kentaro
AU - Urata, Yumi
AU - Sato, Daisuke
N1 - Funding Information:
We deeply thank the editor Kelin Wang, Rachel E. Abercrombie, and an anonymous reviewer for their constructive comments, which helped to improve the manuscript. The comments from Roland Bürgmann on the first draft significantly improved the manuscript. KY thanks Hiroo Kanamori for motivating and helping the investigation of rupture directivity of small earthquakes in the first stage. The figures in the present paper were created using GMT (Wessel and Smith, 1998). Focal mechanisms, rupture directivities, and stress drops determined in this study are accessible via the following address: http://www.aob.gp.tohoku.ac.jp/~yoshida/pub/Tecto2019/ . This research was supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number JP 17K1437
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2019/10/20
Y1 - 2019/10/20
N2 - We examined a relationship between rupture propagation directions and the distribution of fault strength by analyzing seismological data from the earthquake swarm on the Yamagata-Fukushima border, NE Japan. This earthquake swarm exhibits a distinct hypocenter migration behavior and was estimated to be triggered by upward fluid movement after the 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake. We utilized the dense nationwide seismic network in Japan to estimate apparent source time functions of >1500 small earthquakes (MJMA ≥ 2). We found clear directional dependences of the peak amplitude and the pulse-width in the apparent source time functions, suggesting the earthquake rupture directivity, for half of the earthquakes. Rupture directions mostly avoid the directions of the hypocenter migration. The difference between the microscopic and macroscopic propagations of rupture might be explained by the spatial variation in the fault strength affected by pore pressure along the fault; ruptures of each earthquake are hindered from developing toward the region with higher fault strength ahead of the pore-pressure front. Estimates of stress drop systematically increased on taking the effects of rupture directivity into account. We observed a temporal increase in stress drop from 3 MPa to 10 MPa during the pore-pressure migration.
AB - We examined a relationship between rupture propagation directions and the distribution of fault strength by analyzing seismological data from the earthquake swarm on the Yamagata-Fukushima border, NE Japan. This earthquake swarm exhibits a distinct hypocenter migration behavior and was estimated to be triggered by upward fluid movement after the 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake. We utilized the dense nationwide seismic network in Japan to estimate apparent source time functions of >1500 small earthquakes (MJMA ≥ 2). We found clear directional dependences of the peak amplitude and the pulse-width in the apparent source time functions, suggesting the earthquake rupture directivity, for half of the earthquakes. Rupture directions mostly avoid the directions of the hypocenter migration. The difference between the microscopic and macroscopic propagations of rupture might be explained by the spatial variation in the fault strength affected by pore pressure along the fault; ruptures of each earthquake are hindered from developing toward the region with higher fault strength ahead of the pore-pressure front. Estimates of stress drop systematically increased on taking the effects of rupture directivity into account. We observed a temporal increase in stress drop from 3 MPa to 10 MPa during the pore-pressure migration.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.tecto.2019.228184
DO - 10.1016/j.tecto.2019.228184
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85073113586
VL - 769
JO - Tectonophysics
JF - Tectonophysics
SN - 0040-1951
M1 - 228184
ER -