Enigmatic, highly active left-lateral shear zone in southwest Japan explained by aseismic ridge collision

  1. Laura M. Wallace1,
  2. Susan Ellis1,
  3. Kayo Miyao2,
  4. Satoshi Miura2,
  5. John Beavan1 and
  6. Junichi Goto3
  1. 1GNS Science, 1 Fairway Drive, Avalon, Lower Hutt 5010, New Zealand
  2. 2Research Center for Prediction of Earthquakes and Volcanic Eruptions, Graduate School of Science, Tohoku University, 6-6 Aza-Aoba, Aramaki, Aoba-ku, Sendai 980-8578, Japan
  3. 3Nuclear Waste Management Organization of Japan, Mita NN building, 1–23, Shiba 4-chome, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 108-0014, Japan

    Abstract

    Global positioning system (GPS) site velocities and earthquake focal mechanisms reveal an active left-lateral shear zone cutting across Kyushu in southwest Japan. Surprisingly, no active faults have been identified in association with this zone of rapid contemporary deformation. To explain the existence of this shear zone, we propose a model comprising subduction of an aseismic ridge (Kyushu-Palau Ridge) at the southwest end of the Nankai Trough. Because of rapid (~40 mm/yr) along-strike migration of the ridge, we suggest that the ridge subduction point (and resulting left-lateral shear zone) is never in one place long enough to enable the development of a through-going fault zone that can be identified at the ground surface, reconciling the mismatch between the GPS, seismological, and geological data in this region. Our conceptual model is supported by numerical modeling results. We also suggest that the along-strike change in subducting plate buoyancy explains the recent counterclockwise rotation of the Kyushu forearc documented in paleomagnetic studies, as is found in many other western Pacific subduction margins.

    Footnotes

    • 1 GSA Data Repository item 2009039, Appendix (GPS data analysis and data interpretation), is available online at www.geosociety.org/pubs/ft2009.htm, or on request from editing{at}geosociety.org or Documents Secretary, GSA, P.O. Box 9140, Boulder, CO 80301, USA.

      • Received 15 June 2008.
      • Revision received 5 October 2008.
      • Accepted 9 October 2008.
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