Upward Earthquake Swarm Migration in the Northeastern Noto Peninsula, Japan, Initiated From a Deep Ring‐Shaped Cluster: Possibility of Fluid Leakage From a Hidden Magma System

Author:

Yoshida Keisuke1ORCID,Uno Masaoki2ORCID,Matsuzawa Toru1ORCID,Yukutake Yohei3ORCID,Mukuhira Yusuke4ORCID,Sato Hiroshi3ORCID,Yoshida Takeyoshi5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research Center for Prediction of Earthquakes and Volcanic Eruptions Graduate School of Science Tohoku University Sendai Japan

2. Graduate School of Environmental Studies Tohoku University Sendai Japan

3. Earthquake Research Institute The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan

4. Institute of Fluid Science Tohoku University Sendai Japan

5. Department of Earth Science Tohoku University Sendai Japan

Abstract

AbstractThis study describes an ongoing intense earthquake swarm in the crust of the northeastern Noto Peninsula, Japan, that began around the end of 2019. Fluid movement related to volcanic activity is often involved in earthquake swarms in the crust. However, no volcanic activity has occurred in this region since the Middle Miocene (15.6 Ma). This study investigates the cause of this earthquake swarm based on the spatiotemporal evolution of earthquake hypocenters and seismic reflectors. The hypocenter relocation of 10,940 earthquakes (M > 1) reveals that they are all crustal and migrated upward, activating a complex network of faults at depths shallower than 20 km. The initiation of this earthquake swarm occurred at a locally deep depth (z = 17 km), and the local hypocenter distribution shows a characteristic circular pattern. We find a distinctive S‐wave reflector in the immediate vicinity. A low‐velocity anomaly exists below the reflector, and a high helium isotope ratio and a low‐gravity anomaly were observed at the surface. These observations suggest that the current seismicity is associated with fluids released by ancient or possibly unrecognized modern magmatic activity, although no volcanic activity has been documented in this area for 15 million years. Significant crustal deformation was observed during this swarm and is probably related to the fluid movement and aseismic deformation that contributed to this earthquake swarm. The strongest M5.4 earthquake (as of October 2022) occurred near the migration front on the largest planar structure, leaving the shallow extension unruptured.

Funder

Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics

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