4.7 Article

Continuous Tremor Activity With Stable Polarization Direction Following the 2014 Large Slow Slip Event in the Hikurangi Subduction Margin Offshore New Zealand

Journal

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2021JB022161

Keywords

tremor; seamount; slow slip; New Zealand; S-wave splitting; polarization

Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [JP16H06475]
  2. ERI [JURP 2013-B-09]
  3. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) of Japan
  4. Earthquake Research Institute (ERI), University of Tokyo
  5. National Science Foundation (NSF) [OCE-1551922, NSF-1551683]
  6. National Science Foundation (NSF)
  7. Earthquake Research Institute (ERI) at the University of Tokyo
  8. New Zealand's GeoNet project

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This study applies S-wave splitting and polarization analysis methods to continuous OBS waveform data and identifies continuous tremor activity occurring at the end of the 2014 slow slip event. The tremors are generated around a bend in the slow slip contours and at the landward edge of a subducted seamount.
Many types of slow earthquakes have been discovered at subduction zones around the world. However, the physical process of these slow earthquakes is not well understood. To monitor offshore slow earthquakes, a marine seismic and geodetic experiment was conducted at the Hikurangi subduction margin from May 2014 to June 2015. During this experiment, a large slow slip event (Mw 6.8) occurred directly beneath the ocean bottom seismometer (OBS) network. In this study, S-wave splitting and polarization analysis methods, which have been previously used on onshore data to investigate tremor and anisotropy, are applied to continuous OBS waveform data to identify tremors that are too small to detect by the envelope cross correlation method. Continuous tremor activity with stable polarization directions is detected at the end of the 2014 slow slip event and continued for about 2 weeks. The tremors are generated around a southwest bend in the slow slip contours and at the landward edge of a subducted seamount. Our findings corroborate a previous interpretation, based on burst-type repeating earthquakes and intermittent tremor, that localized slow slip and tremor around the seamount was triggered by fluid migration following the large plate boundary slow slip event and indicate tremor occurred continuously rather than as isolated and sporadic individual events.

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