The Elusive Role of Aseismic Slip Along a Seaward Dipping Normal Fault in the Indirect Triggering of a Normal Faulting Earthquake Sequence in Northeast Japan Following the 2011 Tohoku‐Oki Megathrust

Author:

Magen Yohai123ORCID,Inbal Asaf1ORCID,Ziv Alon1,Baer Gidon2,Bürgmann Roland4ORCID,Periollat Axel5ORCID,Sagiya Takeshi6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geophysics Tel‐Aviv University Tel Aviv Israel

2. Geological Survey of Israel Jerusalem Israel

3. Now at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California San Diego La Jolla CA USA

4. Department of Earth and Planetary Science University of California Berkeley Berkeley CA USA

5. CNRS IRD ISTerre Université Grenoble Alpes Université Savoie Mont Blanc Université Gustave Eiffel Grenoble France

6. Disaster Mitigation Research Center Nagoya University Nagoya Japan

Abstract

AbstractAlthough blind normal faults are common in subduction environments, their rheology, kinematics and interaction with the upper crust are poorly constrained. A month‐long shallow normal faulting sequence in the Ibaraki‐Fukushima prefectural border (IFPB), northeast Japan, which followed the Mw9.0 Tohoku‐Oki earthquake (TOE) and culminated in the Mw6.7 Iwaki earthquake, provides a window into megathrust‐to‐normal fault interaction. Stress change calculations indicate that direct triggering by the TOE co‐ and post‐seismic slip does not provide a plausible explanation for the IFPB earthquake sequence. In quest for an alternative triggering mechanism, we analyzed post‐TOE GNSS data from eastern IFPB. A key step in this analysis is the removal of the large‐scale post‐TOE displacement field, after which a distinct highly‐localized strain along the coastline becomes apparent. The accumulation of this strain was mostly aseismic, and migrated with time prior to the Iwaki earthquake in a manner that correlates well with post‐TOE local seismicity. We attribute the pre‐Iwaki earthquake strain accumulation to aseismic slip along low‐angle seaward dipping blind normal fault, activated by the TOE. Stresses transferred by this slip episode accelerated the failure along the IFPB shallow normal faults. This indirect triggering of the Iwaki earthquake sequence by the TOE highlights the complexity of stress transfers in subduction environments.

Funder

United States - Israel Binational Science Foundation

Israel Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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