Abstract

An ocean bottom seismograph was deployed on the seaward side of the Kuril Trench off Hokkaido, Japan, in 5460 m of water in August during the 1975 Joint Soviet-American Tsunami Expedition. During the 7-day record, S-P times were distributed in three groups: 19–24 s, corresponding to aftershocks of the June 10 and June 13, 1975, earthquakes southeast of Nemuro, Japan, and to earthquakes east of Sanriku, Japan; ∼30 s, from south of Erimo Peninsula, Hokkaido; and ∼100 s, from the Izu-Bonin islands. Seven earthquakes, with hypocenters well determined by the land seismic net, are studied in detail. A shallow focus earthquake yields typical oceanic mantle velocities shallower than 50 km in the slab which dips under the Japan archipelago. However, deeper focus earthquakes reveal anomalously high velocities (Vp ≥ 8.50 km/s, Vs ≥ 4.80 km/s) averaged over the upper 230 km in agreement with the models of Utsu and Oliver and Isacks. Two deep earthquakes, whose paths lie in the Pacific Ocean asthenosphere, suggest a velocity 3% lower than that predicted by Jeffreys-Bullen, in agreement with the above models.

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