Abstract

Seismic slip vectors along the Japan Trench, the eastern margin of the Japan Sea and the Sagami Trough are compared with global relative plate motions (RM2, Minster and Jordan, 1978) to test a new hypothesis that northern Honshu, Japan, is part of the North American plate. This hypothesis also claims that the eastern margin of the Japan Sea is a nascent convergent plate boundary (Kobayashi, 1983; Nakamura, 1983). Seismic slip vectors along the Japan Trench are more parallel to the direction of the Pacific-North American relative motion than that of the Pacific-Eurasian relative motion. However, the difference in calculated relative motions is too small avoid to the possibility that a systematic bias in seismic slip vectors due to anomalous velocity structure beneath island arcs causes this apparent coincidence. Seismic slip vectors and rates of shortening along the eastern margin of the Japan Sea for the past 400 years are also consistent with the relative motion between the North American and Eurasian plates calculated there. Seismic slip vectors and horizontal crustal strain patterns revealed by geodetic surveys in south Kanto, beneath which the Philippine Sea plate is subducting, indicate two major directions; one is the relative motion between the North American and Philippine Sea plates, and the other that between the Eurasian and Philippine Sea plates. One possible interpretation of this is that the eastern margin of the Japan Sea may be in an embryonic stage of plate convergence and the jump of the North American-Eurasian plate boundary from Sakhalin-central Hokkaido to the eastern margin of the Japan Sea has not yet been accomplished. In this case northern Honshu is a microplate which does not have a driving force itself and its motion is affected by the surrounding major plates, behaving as part of either the Eurasian or North American plate. Another possibility is that the seismic slip vectors and crustal deformations in south Kanto do not correctly represent the relative motion between plates but represent the stresses due to non-rigid behaviors of part of northern Honshu.

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