Abstract

We use the finite difference method to simulate seismic wavefields at broadband land and seafloor stations for a given terrestrial landslide source, where the seafloor stations are located at water depths of 1,900–4,300 m. Our simulation results for the landslide source explain observations well at the seafloor stations for a frequency range of 0.05–0.1 Hz. Assuming the epicenter to be located in the vicinity of a large submarine slump, we also model wavefields at the stations for a submarine landslide source. We detect propagation of the Airy phase with an apparent velocity of 0.7 km/s in association with the seawater layer and an accretionary prism for the vertical component of waveforms at the seafloor stations. This later phase is not detected when the structural model does not consider seawater. For the model incorporating the seawater, the amplitude of the vertical component at seafloor stations can be up to four times that for the model that excludes seawater; we attribute this to the effects of the seawater layer on the wavefields. We also find that the amplification of the waveform depends not only on the presence of the seawater layer but also on the thickness of the accretionary prism, indicating low amplitudes at the land stations and at seafloor stations located near the trough but high amplitudes at other stations, particularly those located above the thick prism off the trough. Ignoring these characteristic structures in the oceanic area and simply calculating the wavefields using the same structural model used for land areas would result in erroneous estimates of the size of the submarine landslide and the mechanisms underlying its generation. Our results highlight the importance of adopting a structural model that incorporates the 3D accretionary prism and seawater layer into the simulation in order to precisely evaluate seismic wavefields in seafloor areas.

Highlights

  • Submarine landslides are gravitational phenomena that occur at the seafloor in regions of steep slope

  • They demonstrated that numerical simulations assuming this change in seafloor topography associated with the submarine landslide were better able to explain the tsunami observed in coastal areas than those based on fault motion alone

  • We investigate seismic wavefields at DONET seafloor stations for a terrestrial landslide and a submarine landslide based on finite difference simulation

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Submarine landslides are gravitational phenomena that occur at the seafloor in regions of steep slope. Several observational and simulation studies (primarily bathymetric surveys and tsunami studies) have shown that submarine landslides are most likely to be triggered during large earthquakes. BABA et al (2012) found a clear difference in seafloor topography before and after the 2009 Suruga Bay, Japan, earthquake (M 6.4), which they interpreted to be associated with a submarine landslide on the basis of bathymetric surveys. They demonstrated that numerical simulations assuming this change in seafloor topography associated with the submarine landslide were better able to explain the tsunami observed in coastal areas than those based on fault motion alone

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call