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A review of the rupture characteristics of the 2011 Tohoku-oki Mw 9.1 earthquake

Journal

TECTONOPHYSICS
Volume 733, Issue -, Pages 4-36

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.tecto.2017.09.022

Keywords

2011 Tohoku-oki earthquake; Japan subduction zone; Megathrust faulting; Ground displacements; Tsunami generation; Fault slip distribution; Seafloor geodesy; Finite-source model; Rupture parameters; Earthquake physics; Fault friction

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [EAR1245717]
  2. Directorate For Geosciences [1245717] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  3. Division Of Earth Sciences [1245717] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The 2011 March 11 Tohoku-oki great (Mw 9.1) earthquake ruptured the plate boundary megathrust fault offshore of northern Honshu with estimates of shallow slip of 50 m and more near the trench. Non-uniform slip extended similar to 220 km across the width and similar to 400 km along strike of the subduction zone. Extensive data provided by regional networks of seismic and geodetic stations in Japan and global networks of broadband seismic stations, regional and global ocean bottom pressure sensors and sea level measurement stations, seafloor GPS/Acoustic displacement sites, repeated multi-channel reflection images, extensive coastal runup and inundation observations, and in situ sampling of the shallow fault zone materials and temperature perturbation, make the event the best-recorded and most extensively studied great earthquake to date. An effort is made here to identify the more robust attributes of the rupture as well as less well constrained, but likely features. Other issues involve the degree to which the rupture corresponded to geodetically-defined preceding slip-deficit regions, the influence of re-rupture of slip regions for large events in the past few centuries, and relationships of coseismic slip to precursory slow slip, foreshocks, aftershocks, afterslip, and relocking of the megathrust. Frictional properties associated with the slip heterogeneity and in situ measurements of frictional heating of the shallow fault zone support low stress during shallow sliding and near-total shear stress drop of similar to 10-30 MPa in large-slip regions in the shallow megathrust. The roles of fault morphology, sediments, fluids, and dynamical processes in the rupture behavior continue to be examined; consensus has not yet been achieved. The possibility of secondary sources of tsunami excitation such as inelastic deformation of the sedimentary wedge or submarine slumping remains undemonstrated; dislocation models in an elastic continuum appear to sufficiently account for most mainshock observations, although afterslip and viscoelastic processes remain contested.

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