Abstract

In the southern Kanto region of Japan, where the Philippine Sea plate is descending at the Sagami trough, two different types of large interplate earthquakes have occurred repeatedly. The 1923 (Taisho) and 1703 (Genroku) Kanto earthquakes characterize the first and second types, respectively. A reliable source model has been obtained for the 1923 event from seismological and geodetical data, but not for the 1703 event because we have only historical records and paleo-shoreline data about it. We developed an inversion method to estimate fault slip distribution of interplate repeating earthquakes from paleo-shoreline data on the idea of crustal deformation cycles associated with subduction-zone earthquakes. By applying the inversion method to the present heights of the Genroku and Holocene marine terraces developed along the coasts of the southern Boso and Miura peninsulas, we estimated the fault slip distribution of the 1703 Genroku earthquake as follows. The source region extends along the Sagami trough from the Miura peninsula to the offing of the southern Boso peninsula, which covers the southern two thirds of the source region of the 1923 Kanto earthquake. The coseismic slip takes the maximum of 20 m at the southern tip of the Boso peninsula, and the moment magnitude (Mw) is calculated as 8.2. From the interseismic slip-deficit rates at the plate interface obtained by GPS data inversion, assuming that the total slip deficit is compensated by coseismic slip, we can roughly estimate the average recurrence interval as 350 years for large interplate events of any type and 1400 years for the Genroku-type events.

Highlights

  • Data used for inversion analysis Before solving the inverse problem in Eq (10), we need to evaluate each term in Eq (11), that is, (1) the present heights of the Genroku terrace, (2) the effect of steady plate subduction, (3) the effect of steady slip deficit in the source region of the 1923 Taisho event, and (4) the effect of fault slip at the 1923 Taisho event

  • We developed an inversion method to estimate fault slip distribution of repeated interplate earthquakes from paleo-shoreline data on the idea of deformation cycles associated with subduction-zone earthquakes

  • By applying the inversion method to the present heights of the Genroku and Holocene marine terraces developed along the coasts of the Boso and Miura peninsulas, we estimated the fault slip distribution of the 1703 Genroku earthquake as follows

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Summary

Introduction

(2013) estimated interseismic slip-deficit rates at the plate interface from the GPS data and revealed that a broad zone with high slip-deficit rates extends along the Sagami trough from southeast off the Boso peninsula to the Izu-Mainland collision zone. The 1923 (Taisho) and 1703 (Genroku) Kanto earthquakes characterize the first and second types, respectively. Both of them are megathrust events at the same plate interface, but their source regions seem to be somewhat different because of significant difference in coseismic displacement patterns (e.g., Matsuda et al 1978). The fault slip distribution of the 1923 Taisho event has been estimated from geodetic (triangulation and leveling) data by many researchers

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