Journal of Physics of the Earth
Online ISSN : 1884-2305
Print ISSN : 0022-3743
ISSN-L : 0022-3743
Detailed Mapping of Focal Mechanisms in/around the 1995 Hyogo-ken Nanbu Earthquake Rupture Zone
Hiroshi KataoNaoki MaedaYoshihiro HiramatsuYoshihisa IioSetsuro Nakao
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JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

1997 Volume 45 Issue 2 Pages 105-119

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Abstract

Earthquake focal mechanisms before and after the 1995 Hyogo-ken Nanbu earthquake have been investigated using seismic records from regional seismic networks. Before the mainshock, seismicity was very active at the Tamba Plateau, a neighboring area of the Hyogo-ken Nanbu earthquake rupture zone. In contrast, the seismicity along the Hyogo-ken Nanbu earthquake rupture zone was not so active. Most earthquakes in these regions had source mechanisms of E-W compression and were of the strike-slip or reverse-fault type. Most aftershocks along the Hyogo-ken Nanbu earthquake rupture zone have strike-slip solutions with P-axis in the E-W or ESE-WNW direction, which is compatible with the trend of aftershock distribution and the strike of active faults the same as the mainshock mechanism. Simultaneously, many other aftershocks were of the reverse-fault type with E-W compression. This area is still controlled by the regional stress field of E-W compression observed before the mainshock. Although, we could find various types of mechanisms in the aftershock sequence, some normal fault-type events were also observed in the mainshock rupture zone. We could find events of SE-NW compression, and this direction is nearly perpendicular to the trend of the mainshock rupture zone. Some aftershocks that occurred near the epicenter of the mainshock had solutions of N-S compression. The geometry of the active fault systems and/or local stress change induced by the mainshock may cause these complex features of focal mechanisms. After the mainshock, the focal mechanisms of earthquakes in the Tamba Plateau were approximately E-W compressional; the same as that before the mainshock.

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© The Seismological Society of Japan
Copyright© The Geodetic Society of Japan
Copyright© The Volcanological Society of Japan
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