1993 Okushiri earthquake

Earthquake in Japan
42°51′04″N 139°11′49″E / 42.851°N 139.197°E / 42.851; 139.197Areas affectedJapan, HokkaidoMax. intensityJMA 5[1]
VIII (Severe)TsunamiyesCasualties230 dead

The 1993 southwest-off Hokkaido earthquake (北海道南西沖地震, Hokkaidō Nansei Oki Jishin) or Okushiri earthquake occurred at 13:17:12 UTC on 12 July 1993 in the Sea of Japan near the island of Hokkaido.[2] It had a magnitude of 7.7 on the moment magnitude scale and a maximum felt intensity of VIII (Severe) on the Mercalli intensity scale. It triggered a major tsunami that caused deaths on Hokkaidō and in southeastern Russia, with a total of 230 fatalities recorded. The island of Okushiri was hardest hit, with 165 casualties from the earthquake, the tsunami and a large landslide.[3]

Tectonic setting

The northwestern side of Honshu lies on the southeastern margin of the Sea of Japan, an area of oceanic crust created by back-arc spreading associated with the convergent boundary where the Pacific Plate is subducted beneath the Okhotsk Plate. The spreading was active from the late Oligocene to the middle Miocene. The extensional tectonics associated with the spreading formed a series of N-S trending extensional faults and associated sedimentary basins. Currently the area is being deformed by contractional tectonics, causing inversion of these earlier basins, forming anticlinal structures.[4] It has been suggested that the northwestern coast of Honshu represents an incipient subduction zone,[5] but there remain significant uncertainties about the existence of the Okhotsk Plate and the nature and precise location of its boundary in the Sea of Japan, if it does exist.[6][7]

This region has been the location for several historical earthquakes, such as the 1964 Niigata and 1983 Sea of Japan earthquakes, with reverse fault mechanisms, on faults trending approximately north–south.

Damage

The earthquake shaking caused moderately severe damage, VIII on the Mercalli scale. The tsunami reached Okushiri between 2 and 7 minutes after the earthquake. A tsunami warning was given 5 minutes after the earthquake by the JMA. However, this was too late for the inhabitants of Okushiri.[dead link][3] The quake caused fires to start in the town of Okushiri, adding greatly to the total damage.

Characteristics

Earthquake

The earthquake had two distinct shocks. The first lasted for 20 seconds, while the second lasted 35 seconds.[8]

The rupture occurred on a fault that dipped at 24 degrees to the east. It had an estimated length of 150 km with a displacement of 2.5 m. The island of Okushiri subsided by 5–80 cm.[dead link][3]

Tsunami

The resulting tsunami inundated large parts of Okushiri, despite its tsunami defences. Okushiri had been struck by another tsunami 10 years earlier. A maximum run-up of 32 m was recorded on the western part of the island near Monai. A tsunami was widely observed in the Sea of Japan with a run-up of 3.5 m at Akita in northern Honshu, up to 4.0 m in southeastern Russia and up to 2.6 m on the coast of South Korea.[9]

Landslide

The Okushiri-port landslide involved a volume of 1.5 x 105 m3 of rock. The slide failure occurred at the base of a volcanic breccia bed. The slide occurred in two phases that may match the two separate shocks recorded for the earthquake.[8]

Aftermath

The destructive power of this tsunami led to an overhaul of the sea defences on Okushiri involving the construction of tsunami sluices on a river and strengthened embankments. New escape routes were also provided and help was given for households to purchase emergency broadcast receivers.[10]

See also

References

  1. ^ "M 7.7 - 107 km W of Iwanai, Japan". United States Geological Survey.
  2. ^ Japan Meteorological Agency officially named this earthquake 平成5年(1993年)北海道南西沖地震 (Heisei 5 nen (1993 nen) Hokkaidō nansei-oki jishin, literally the 1993 Southwest-off Hokkaido Earthquake). 気象庁が命名した気象及び地震火山現象 Archived 2017-10-29 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ a b c NGDC. "Comments for the Significant Earthquake". Retrieved 6 November 2010.
  4. ^ Sato, H.; Yoshida T.; Takaya I.; Sato T.; Ikeda Y. & Umino N. (2004). "Late Cenozoic tectonic development of the back arc region of central northern Honshu, Japan, revealed by recent deep seismic profiling". Journal of the Japanese Association for Petroleum Technology. 69 (2): 145–154. doi:10.3720/japt.69.145. ISSN 0370-9868.
  5. ^ Kanamori, H.; Astiz L. (1985). "The 1983 Akita-Oki Earthquake (Mw=7.8) and its Implications for Systematics of Subduction Earthquakes" (PDF). Earthquake Prediction Research. 3: 305–317. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 December 2013. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
  6. ^ Seno, Tetsuzo; Sakurai, Taro; Stein, Seth (1996). "Can the Okhotsk plate be discriminated from the North American plate?". Journal of Geophysical Research. 101 (B5): 11305–11315. Bibcode:1996JGR...10111305S. doi:10.1029/96JB00532.
  7. ^ Apel, E. V.; Bürgmann, R.; Steblov, G.; Vasilenko, N.; King, R.; Prytkov, A (2006), "Independent active microplate tectonics of northeast Asia from GPS velocities and block modeling", Geophysical Research Letters, 33 (L11303): L11303, Bibcode:2006GeoRL..3311303A, doi:10.1029/2006GL026077
  8. ^ a b Yamagishi, H. (2000). "Recent Landslides in Western Hokkaido, Japan". Pure and Applied Geophysics. 157 (6–8): 1115–1134. Bibcode:2000PApGe.157.1115Y. doi:10.1007/s000240050020. S2CID 106398949.
  9. ^ NGDC. "Comments for the Tsunami Event". Retrieved 6 November 2010.
  10. ^ Nakao, M. "Okushiri Tsunami Generated by southwest-off Hokkaido earthquake". Failure Knowledge Database. Retrieved 6 November 2010.[permanent dead link]

External links

  • The International Seismological Centre has a bibliography and/or authoritative data for this event.
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