Earth, Planets and Space (Mar 2019)

Double seismic zone and seismicity in the mantle wedge beneath the Ogasawara Islands identified by an ocean bottom seismometer observation

  • Kenji Nakata,
  • Akio Kobayashi,
  • Akio Katsumata,
  • Fuyuki Hirose,
  • Takahito Nishimiya,
  • Kazuhiro Kimura,
  • Hiroaki Tsushima,
  • Kenji Maeda,
  • Hisatoshi Baba,
  • Noritaka Hanamura,
  • Chisato Yamada,
  • Masashi Kanezashi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40623-019-1012-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 71, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Around the Ogasawara Islands, only a few seismic stations in the area can be used to determine the hypocenters of regional earthquakes; thus, hypocenter location precision tends to be low. To more precisely determine hypocenter locations, we deployed a temporary seismic observation network of pop-up ocean bottom seismometers around the Ogasawara Islands from July to October 2015. We identified a double seismic zone in the 70–200 km depth range associated with the subducting Pacific slab. The slab-normal distance between the two planes of the double seismic zone is about 30–35 km, similar to such distances observed along the Japan and Mariana trenches. Furthermore, we found unusual seismicity in the mantle wedge at 20–50 km depth beneath the Ogasawara trough that might be related to structure formed at the onset of the oceanic slab subduction. The hypocenters determined from the ocean bottom seismometer observation were horizontally separated by a few tens of kilometers from hypocenters published by the Seismological Bulletin of Japan. USGS locations (Preliminary Determination of Epicenters) seem to be offset westward about 30 km compared with the locations determined in this study.

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