Publication | Open Access
Local stress concentration in the seismic belt along the Japan Sea coast inferred from precise focal mechanisms: Implications for the stress accumulation process on intraplate earthquake faults
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Citations
30
References
2009
Year
EngineeringPrecise Focal MechanismsEarthquake HazardsLocal Stress ConcentrationEarth ScienceMaximum Principal StressGeophysicsStress InversionsCrustal DeformationEarthquake SourceRegional TectonicsGeodesyMarine GeologySeismic ImagingSeismic BeltEarthquake RuptureTectonicsSouthwest JapanFault GeometrySeismologySubduction ZoneCivil EngineeringSeismic Hazard
Spatial changes in the azimuth of the maximum principal stress ( σ 1 ) axis are found in the intraplate region of southwest Japan. It is inferred from stress inversions of numerous precise focal mechanisms that the azimuths of the σ 1 axis in the seismic belt along the Japan Sea coast are oriented in N110°E–N130°E directions, while in the surrounding region they are aligned in almost the EW direction, N90°E–N100°E. Maximum horizontal compressional stresses in an EW direction are widely observed in the shallow crust in the inland plate along the Nankai Trough. However, the maximum horizontal stress in a WNW–ESE direction is seen only in the seismic belt. This spatial change in the stress field in and around the seismic belt is explained by the deformation of an aseismic fault or a ductile fault zone in the lower crust beneath the seismic belt.
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