Sensors (Nov 2009)

Trial of Multidisciplinary Observation at an Expandable Sub-Marine Cabled Station “Off-Hatsushima Island Observatory” in Sagami Bay, Japan

  • Toshiyasu Nagao,
  • Ichiro Takahashi,
  • Tomoki Watanabe,
  • Hitoshi Mikada,
  • Kenichi Asakawa,
  • Eiichiro Araki,
  • Ryoichi Iwase,
  • Keizo Sayanagi,
  • Kyohiko Mitsuzawa,
  • Tada-nori Goto,
  • Takafumi Kasaya

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s91109241
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
pp. 9241 – 9254

Abstract

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Sagami Bay is an active tectonic area in Japan. In 1993, a real-time deep sea floor observatory was deployed at 1,175 m depth about 7 km off Hatsushima Island, Sagami Bay to monitor seismic activities and other geophysical phenomena. Video cameras monitored biological activities associated with tectonic activities. The observation system was renovated completely in 2000. An ocean bottom electromagnetic meter (OBEM), an ocean bottom differential pressure gauge (DPG) system, and an ocean bottom gravity meter (OBG) were installed January 2005; operations began in February of that year. An earthquake (M5.4) in April 2006, generated a submarine landslide that reached the Hatsushima Observatory, moving some sensors. The video camera took movies of mudflows; OBEM and other sensors detected distinctive changes occurring with the mudflow. Although the DPG and OBG were recovered in January 2008, the OBEM continues to obtain data.

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