The isolated ∼680 km deep 30 May 2015 M_W 7.9 Ogasawara (Bonin) Islands earthquake
Abstract
Deep-focus earthquakes, located in very high-pressure conditions 300 to 700 km below the Earth's surface within sinking slabs of relatively cold oceanic lithosphere, are mysterious phenomena. The largest recorded deep-focus earthquake (M_W 7.9) in the Izu–Bonin slab struck on 30 May 2015 beneath the Ogasawara (Bonin) Islands, isolated from prior seismicity by over 100 km in depth, and followed by only a few small aftershocks. Globally, this is the deepest (680 km centroid depth) event with M_W≥7.8 in the seismological record. Seismicity indicates along-strike contortion of the Izu–Bonin slab, with horizontal flattening near a depth of 550 km in the Izu region and rapid steepening to near-vertical toward the south above the location of the 2015 event. This event was exceptionally well-recorded by seismic stations around the world, allowing detailed constraints to be placed on the source process. Analyses of a large global data set of P, SH and pP seismic phases using short-period back-projection, subevent directivity, and broadband finite-fault inversion indicate that the mainshock ruptured a shallowly-dipping fault plane with patchy slip that spread over a distance of ∼40 km with a multi-stage expansion rate (∼5+ km/s down-dip initially, ∼3 km/s up-dip later). During the 17 s total rupture duration the radiated energy was ∼3.3×10^(16) J and the stress drop was ∼38 MPa. The radiation efficiency is moderate (0.34), intermediate to that of the 1994 Bolivia and 2013 Sea of Okhotsk M_W 8.3 deep earthquakes, indicating that source processes of very large deep earthquakes sample a wide range of behavior from dissipative, more viscous failure to very brittle failure. The isolated occurrence of the event, much deeper than the apparently thermally-bounded distribution of Bonin-slab seismicity above 600 km depth, suggests that localized stress concentration associated with the pronounced deformation of the Izu–Bonin slab and proximity to the 660-km phase transition likely played a dominant role in generating this major earthquake.
Additional Information
© 2015 Elsevier B.V. Received 23 August 2015; Received in revised form 19 October 2015; Accepted 28 October 2015; Available online 9 November 2015. The IRIS DMS (http://www.iris.edu/hq/) and Orpheus (http://www.orfeus-eu.org) data centers were used to access the seismic data from Global Seismic Network and Federation of Digital Seis-mic Network stations, and the Hi-net data center (http://www.hinet.bosai.go.jp/about_data/?LANG=en) of NIED was used to ac-cess Hi-net recordings. The Data Management Centre of China National Seismic Network at Institute of Geophysics, China Earth-quake Administration, provided waveform data in China. This work made use of GMT and SAC software. K. Koper provided access to and training with his back-projection software. We thank an anonymous reviewer and H. Houston for helpful comments on the manuscript. This work was supported by NSF grant EAR1245717 (T.L.).Attached Files
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 63688
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20160114-115759902
- NSF
- EAR-1245717
- Created
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2016-01-14Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-10Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- Seismological Laboratory, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences (GPS)