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Featured researches published by Kodo Umakoshi.


Science | 2015

Migrating tremor off southern Kyushu as evidence for slow slip of a shallow subduction interface

Yusuke Yamashita; Hiroshi Yakiwara; Youichi Asano; Hiroshi Shimizu; Kazunari Uchida; Syuichiro Hirano; Kodo Umakoshi; Hiroki Miyamachi; Manami Nakamoto; Miyo Fukui; M. Kamizono; H. Kanehara; Tomohito J. Yamada; Masanao Shinohara; Kazushige Obara

Silent slip events get shallow Clues to help better predict the likelihood of devastating earthquakes and tsunamis may be embedded in a more gentle type of rumbling. Using oceanbottom seismometers, Yamashita et al. report rare observations of migrating tremors in the shallow part of a subduction zone off southern Kyushu, Japan. The tremors appear to be linked to a very low-frequency earthquake and seem to migrate to the region where big earthquakes are generated. The tremors may be tracing how and where stress gets concentrated onto the earthquake-producing portion of the fault. Science, this issue p. 676 Earthquake and tsunami hazard forecasts may benefit from shallow observations of seismic tremor migration in subduction zones. Detection of shallow slow earthquakes offers insight into the near-trench part of the subduction interface, an important region in the development of great earthquake ruptures and tsunami generation. Ocean-bottom monitoring of offshore seismicity off southern Kyushu, Japan, recorded a complete episode of low-frequency tremor, lasting for 1 month, that was associated with very-low-frequency earthquake (VLFE) activity in the shallow plate interface. The shallow tremor episode exhibited two migration modes reminiscent of deep tremor down-dip of the seismogenic zone in some other subduction zones: a large-scale slower propagation mode and a rapid reversal mode. These similarities in migration properties and the association with VLFEs strongly suggest that both the shallow and deep tremor and VLFE may be triggered by the migration of episodic slow slip events.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

Spine growth and seismogenic faulting at Mt. Unzen, Japan

Adrian J. Hornby; Jackie E. Kendrick; Oliver D. Lamb; Takehiro Hirose; Silvio De Angelis; Felix W. von Aulock; Kodo Umakoshi; Takahiro Miwa; Sarah Henton De Angelis; Fabian B. Wadsworth; K.-U. Hess; Donald B. Dingwell; Yan Lavallée

The concluding episode of activity during the recent eruption of Mt. Unzen (October 1994 to February 1995) was characterized by incremental spine extrusion, accompanied by seismicity. Analysis of the seismic record reveals the occurrence of two dominant long-period event families associated with a repeating, nondestructive source mechanism, which we attribute to magma failure and fault-controlled ascent. We obtain constraints on the slip rate and distance of faulting events within these families. That analysis is complemented by an experimental thermomechanical investigation of fault friction in Mt. Unzen dacitic dome rock using a rotary-shear apparatus at variable slip rates and normal stresses. A power density threshold is found at 0.3 MW m−2, above which frictional melt forms and controls the shear resistance to slip, inducing a deviation from Byerlees frictional law. Homogenized experimentally generated pseudotachylytes have a similar final chemistry, thickness, and crystal content, facilitating the construction of a rheological model for particle suspensions. This is compared to the viscosity constrained from the experimental data, to assess the viscous control on fault dynamics. The onset of frictional melt formation during spine growth is constrained to depths below 300 m for an average slip event. This combination of experimental data, viscosity modeling, and seismic analysis offers a new description of material response during conduit plug flow and spine growth, showing that volcanic pseudotachylyte may commonly form and modify fault friction during faulting of dome rock. This model furthers our understanding of faulting and seismicity during lava dome formation and is applicable to other eruption modes.


Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2001

Volcano-tectonic seismicity at Unzen Volcano, Japan, 1985–1999

Kodo Umakoshi; Hiroshi Shimizu; Norimichi Matsuwo


Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors | 2008

Seismic velocity structure around the Hyuganada region, Southwest Japan, derived from seismic tomography using land and OBS data and its implications for interplate coupling and vertical crustal uplift

Michitaka Tahara; Kazutake Uehira; Hiroshi Shimizu; Masao Nakada; Tomoaki Yamada; Kimihiro Mochizuki; Masanao Shinohara; Minoru Nishino; Ryota Hino; Hiroshi Yakiwara; Hiroki Miyamachi; Kodo Umakoshi; M. Goda; Norimichi Matsuwo; Toshihiko Kanazawa


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2016

Stress, strain rate and anisotropy in Kyushu, Japan

Martha K. Savage; Yosuke Aoki; K. Unglert; Takahiro Ohkura; Kodo Umakoshi; Hiroshi Shimizu; Masato Iguchi; Takeshi Tameguri; Takao Ohminato; Jim Mori


Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2008

Seismicity associated with the 1991–1995 dome growth at Unzen Volcano, Japan

Kodo Umakoshi; N. Takamura; N. Shinzato; Kazunari Uchida; Norimichi Matsuwo; Hiroshi Shimizu


Journal of Natural Disaster Science | 1993

SEISMIC OBSERVATIONS AND INFRARED THERMAL SURVEYS OF THE 1990-1993 ERUPTION OF UNZEN VOLCANO

Kodo Umakoshi; Hiroshi Shimizu; Norimichi Matsuwo; Takeshi Matsushima; Kazuya Ohta


Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2011

High-frequency earthquake swarm associated with the May 1991 dome extrusion at Unzen Volcano, Japan

Kodo Umakoshi; Naoko Itasaka; Hiroshi Shimizu


Solid Earth | 2015

Repetitive fracturing during spine extrusion at Unzen volcano, Japan

Oliver D. Lamb; S. De Angelis; Kodo Umakoshi; Adrian J. Hornby; Jackie E. Kendrick; Yan Lavallée


Journal of the Seismological Society of Japan | 1997

Pn Velocity in Kyushu Deduced from Travel Time Analysis of Local Earthquakes

Shuichiro Fukumitsu; Hiroki Miyamachi; Toshiki Kakuta; Kazuhiko Goto; Kodo Umakoshi; Hiroshi Shimizu

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