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Featured researches published by Yoshio Murai.


Tectonophysics | 2002

A possible Caledonide arm through the Barents Sea imaged by OBS data

A. J. Breivik; Rolf Mjelde; Paul Grogan; Hideki Shimamura; Yoshio Murai; Yuichi Nishimura; A. Kuwano

Abstract The assembly of the crystalline basement of the western Barents Sea is related to the Caledonian orogeny during the Silurian. However, the development southeast of Svalbard is not well understood, as conventional seismic reflection data does not provide reliable mapping below the Permian sequence. A wide-angle seismic survey from 1998, conducted with ocean bottom seismometers in the northwestern Barents Sea, provides data that enables the identification and mapping of the depths to crystalline basement and Moho by ray tracing and inversion. The four profiles modeled show pre-Permian basins and highs with a configuration distinct from later Mesozoic structural elements. Several strong reflections from within the crystalline crust indicate an inhomogeneous basement terrain. Refractions from the top of the basement together with reflections from the Moho constrain the basement velocity to increase from 6.3 km s−1 at the top to 6.6 km s−1 at the base of the crust. On two profiles, the Moho deepens locally into root structures, which are associated with high top mantle velocities of 8.5 km s−1. Combined P- and S-wave data indicate a mixed sand/clay/carbonate lithology for the sedimentary section, and a predominantly felsic to intermediate crystalline crust. In general, the top basement and Moho surfaces exhibit poor correlation with the observed gravity field, and the gravity models required high-density bodies in the basement and upper mantle to account for the positive gravity anomalies in the area. Comparisons with the Ural suture zone suggest that the Barents Sea data may be interpreted in terms of a proto-Caledonian subduction zone dipping to the southeast, with a crustal root representing remnant of the continental collision, and high mantle velocities and densities representing eclogitized oceanic crust. High-density bodies within the crystalline crust may be accreted island arc or oceanic terrain. The mapped trend of the suture resembles a previously published model of the Caledonian orogeny. This model postulates a separate branch extending into central parts of the Barents Sea coupled with the northerly trending Svalbard Caledonides, and a microcontinent consisting of Svalbard and northern parts of the Barents Sea independent of Laurentia and Baltica at the time. Later, compressional faulting within the suture zone apparently formed the Sentralbanken High.


Tectonophysics | 2003

Crustal structure and transform margin development south of Svalbard based on ocean bottom seismometer data

A. J. Breivik; Rolf Mjelde; Paul Grogan; Hideki Shimamura; Yoshio Murai; Yuichi Nishimura

Abstract The Barents Sea is located in the northwestern corner of the Eurasian continent, where the crustal terrain was assembled in the Caledonian orogeny during Late Ordovician and Silurian times. The western Barents Sea margin developed primarily as a transform margin during the early Tertiary. In the northwestern part south of Svalbard, multichannel reflection seismic lines have poor resolution below the Permian sequence, and the early post-orogenic development is not well known here. In 1998, an ocean bottom seismometer (OBS) survey was collected southwest to southeast of the Svalbard archipelago. One profile was shot across the continental transform margin south of Svalbard, which is presented here. P-wave modeling of the OBS profile indicates a Caledonian suture in the continental basement south of Svalbard, also proposed previously based on a deep seismic reflection line coincident with the OBS profile. The suture zone is associated with a small crustal root and westward dipping mantle reflectivity, and it marks a boundary between two different crystalline basement terrains. The western terrain has low (6.2–6.45 km s −1 ) P-wave velocities, while the eastern has higher (6.3–6.9 km s −1 ) velocities. Gravity modeling agrees with this, as an increased density is needed in the eastern block. The S-wave data predict a quartz-rich lithology compatible with felsic gneiss to granite within and west of the suture zone, and an intermediate lithological composition to the east. A geological model assuming westward dipping Caledonian subduction and collision can explain the missing lower crust in the western block by subduction erosion of the lower crust, as well as the observed structuring. Due to the transform margin setting, the tectonic thinning of the continental block during opening of the Norwegian-Greenland Sea is restricted to the outer 35 km of the continental block, and the continent–ocean boundary (COB) can be located to within 5 km in our data. Distinct from the outer high commonly observed on transform margins, the upper part of the continental crust at the margin is dominated by two large, rotated down-faulted blocks with throws of 2–3 km on each fault, apparently formed during the transform margin development. Analysis of the gravity field shows that these faults probably merge to one single fault to the south of our profile, and that the downfaulting dominates the whole margin segment from Spitsbergen to Bjornoya. South of Bjornoya, the faulting leaves the continental margin to terminate as a graben 75 km south of the island. Adjacent to the continental margin, there is no clear oceanic layer 2 seismic signature. However, the top basement velocity of 6.55 km s −1 is significantly lower than the high (7 km s −1 ) velocity reported earlier from expanding spread profiles (ESPs), and we interpret the velocity structure of the oceanic crust to be a result of a development induced by the 7–8-km-thick sedimentary overburden.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2006

Asymmetric plume‐ridge interaction around Iceland: The Kolbeinsey Ridge Iceland Seismic Experiment

Emilie E. E. Hooft; Bryndís Brandsdóttir; Rolf Mjelde; Hideki Shimamura; Yoshio Murai

We present the results of a seismic refraction experiment that constrains crustal structure and thickness along 225 km of the Kolbeinsey Ridge and Tjornes Fracture Zone and thus quantifies the influence of the Iceland hot spot on melt flux at the spreading center north of Iceland. North of the Iceland shelf, crustal thickness is relatively constant over 75 km, 9.4 ± 0.2 km. Along the southern portion of the Kolbeinsey Ridge, on the Iceland shelf, crustal thickness increases from 9.5 ± 0.1 km to 12.1 ± 0.4 km over 90 km. Gravity inversion indicates a residual crustal gravity anomaly that decreases by about 30–40 mGal toward Iceland. We infer that the variations in crustal thickness and gravity are accompanied by mantle temperature changes of 40° to 50°C. At similar distances from the Iceland hot spot, crustal thickness along the Kolbeinsey Ridge is 2–2.5 km less than at the Reykjanes Ridge, consistent with the asymmetry in plume-ridge interaction that has been inferred from the axial depth and geochemistry of these ridges. Average lower crustal velocities are also higher along the Kolbeinsey Ridge, consistent with a lower degree of active upwelling than along the Reykjanes Ridge. Topography and crustal thickness patterns at the spreading centers around Iceland are consistent with isostatic support for normal crustal and mantle densities. However, we infer that the lower crust beneath central Iceland is considerably denser than that beneath the adjacent ridges. Crustal thickness and geochemical patterns suggest that deep melting is spatially limited and asymmetric about Iceland while shallow melting is enhanced over a broad region. This asymmetry may be due to a mantle plume that is tilted from south to north in the upper mantle and preferentially melts deeper enriched material beneath the Reykjanes Ridge.


Earth, Planets and Space | 2008

Precise aftershock distribution of the 2007 Chuetsu-oki Earthquake obtained by using an ocean bottom seismometer network

Masanao Shinohara; Toshihiko Kanazawa; Tomoaki Yamada; Kazuo Nakahigashi; Shin’ichi Sakai; Ryota Hino; Yoshio Murai; Akira Yamazaki; Koichiro Obana; Yoshihiro Ito; Kazuhiro Iwakiri; Ryo Miura; Yuya Machida; Kimihiro Mochizuki; Kenji Uehira; Michitaka Tahara; A. Kuwano; Shin’ichiro Amamiya; Shuichi Kodaira; Tetsuo Takanami; Yoshiyuki Kaneda; Takaya Iwasaki

The Chuetsu-Oki Earthquake occurred on July 16, 2007. To understand the mechanism of earthquake generation, it is important to obtain a detailed seismic activity. Since the source region of the 2007 Chuetsu-oki Earthquake lies mainly offshore of Chuetsu region, a central part of Niigata Prefecture, it is difficult to estimate the geometry of faults using only the land seismic network data. A precise aftershock distribution is essential to determine the fault geometry of the mainshock. To obtain the detailed aftershock distribution of the 2007 Chuetsu-oki Earthquake, 32 Ocean Bottom Seismometers (OBSs) were deployed from July 25 to August 28 in and around the source region of the mainshock. In addition, a seismic survey using airguns and OBSs was carried out during the observation to obtain a seismic velocity structure below the observation area for precise hypocenter determination. Seven hundred and four aftershocks were recorded with high spatial resolution during the observation period using OBSs, temporally installed land seismic stations, and telemetered seismic land stations and were located using the double-difference method. Most of the aftershocks occurred in a depth range of 6–15 km, which corresponds to the 6-km/s layer. From the depth distribution of the hypocenters, the aftershocks occurred along a plane dipping to the southeast in the whole aftershock region. The dip angle of this plane is approximately 40°. This single plane with a dip to the southeast is considered to represent the fault plane of the mainshock. The regions where few aftershocks occurred are related to the asperities where large slip is estimated from the data of the mainshock. The OBS observation is indispensable to determine the precise depths of events which occur in offshore regions even close to a coast.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2003

Delamination structure imaged in the source area of the 1982 Urakawa-oki earthquake

Yoshio Murai; Satoshi Akiyama; Kei Katsumata; Tetsuo Takanami; Tadashi Yamashina; Tomoki Watanabe; Ikuo Cho; Masayuki Tanaka; A. Kuwano; Naoto Wada; Hideki Shimamura; Itsuo Furuya; Dapeng Zhao; Ryohei Sanda

[1] The Kuril arc collides with the northeast Japan arc in the southern part of Hokkaido, Japan. 3-D tomographic inversion of data from a dense network of sensitive ocean-bottom seismographs and land stations has allowed imaging of previously unseen details of the arc-arc collision structure. A low velocity body dips gently southwestward, at depths of 35 to 45 km, from east of the Hidaka Mountains to the source area of the 1982 Urakawa-oki destructive earthquake (Ms 6.8). The low velocity body is the lower half of the lower crust of the Kuril arc, which must have been delaminated by the collision. We believe that the continuing collision of the delaminated lower crust with the northeast Japan arc resulted as an episode of aseismic slow slip prior to the 1982 Urakawa-oki earthquake as well being the reason for the high seismic activity in this region.


Geological Society, London, Petroleum Geology Conference series | 2005

Crustal structure of the Vøring Margin, NE Atlantic: a review of geological implications based on recent OBS data

Rolf Mjelde; T. Raum; A. J. Breivik; Hideki Shimamura; Yoshio Murai; Tetsuo Takanami; Jan Inge Faleide

Modelling of extensive seismic datasets recorded on Ocean Bottom Seismographs (OBS) on the outer Voring Margin, NE Atlantic, has provided significant new insights into deeper sedimentary structures, distribution of sill-intrusions in the sedimentary section, top of the crystalline crust, the lower crust and Moho. Primarily based on the modelling of S-waves, it is concluded that the high-velocity lower crust most likely consists of a mixture of plume-related Late Cretaceous/Early Tertiary mafic intrusions mixed with older continental blocks. Northeastwards in the Voring Basin, the landward limit of the lower crustal high-velocity layer steps gradually seawards, closely related to five crustal scale lineaments. Evidence for an interplay between active and passive rifting components is found on regional and local scales on the margin. The active component is evident through the decrease in magmatism with increased distance from the Iceland plume, and the passive component is illustrated by the fact that all resolved crustal lineaments to a certain degree acted as barriers to magma emplacement. A lithospheric delamination model is invoked to explain the observed variations in crustal velocities and thickness. The location of six Tertiary domal structures in the Voring Basin is between, or in the vicinity of, pre-breakup high-velocity structures, which may act as rigid blocks during compression. It is proposed that the existence and trend of these high-velocity structures, subject to mild NW–SE compression, is the most important factor controlling the formation, spatial distribution and trend of the domes. Structures in the high-velocity lower crust may be the single most important element in controlling the formation of the domes; all modelled highs in the lower crustal Early Tertiary intrusive layer seem to be related to the formation of domes.


Earth, Planets and Space | 2004

Aftershock observation of the 2003 Tokachi-oki earthquake by using dense ocean bottom seismometer network

Masanao Shinohara; Tomoaki Yamada; Toshihiko Kanazawa; Naoshi Hirata; Yoshiyuki Kaneda; Tetsuo Takanami; Hitoshi Mikada; Kiyoshi Suyehiro; Shin’ichi Sakai; Tomoki Watanabe; Kenji Uehira; Yoshio Murai; Narumi Takahashi; Minoru Nishino; Kimihiro Mochizuki; Takeshi Sato; Ei’ichiro Araki; Ryota Hino; Kouichi Uhira; Hajime Shiobara; Hiroshi Shimizu

The Tokachi-Oki earthquake occurred on September 26, 2003. Precise aftershock distribution is important to understand the mechanism of this earthquake generation. To study the aftershock activity, we deployed forty-seven ocean bottom seismometers (OBSs) and two ocean bottom pressure meters (OBPs) at thirty-eight sites in the source region. We started the OBS observation four days after the mainshock for an observation period of approximately two months. In the middle of the observation period, nine OBSs near the epicenter of the mainshock were recovered to clarify the depth distribution of aftershocks near the mainshock. From the data overall OBS, seventy-four aftershocks were located with high spatial resolution. Most of the aftershocks were located in a depth range of 15–20 km and occurred within the subducting oceanic crust, the 5.5-km/s layer of the landward plate and the plate boundary. No aftershocks were found in the mantle of the subducting plate. The low seismic activity beneath the trench area where the water depth is greater than about 2000 m suggests a weak coupling between the two plates. The depth of the mainshock is inferred to be 15–20 km from the aftershock distribution.


Earth, Planets and Space | 2013

Along-trench structural variation and seismic coupling in the northern Japan subduction zone

Gou Fujie; Seiichi Miura; Shuichi Kodaira; Yoshiyuki Kaneda; Masanao Shinohara; Kimihiro Mochizuki; Toshihiko Kanazawa; Yoshio Murai; Ryota Hino; Toshinori Sato; Kenji Uehira

Large destructive interplate earthquakes, such as the 2011 Mw 9.0 Tohoku-oki earthquake, have occurred repeatedly in the northern Japan subduction zone. The spatial distribution of large interplate earthquakes shows distinct along-trench variations, implying regional variations in interplate coupling. We conducted an extensive wide-angle seismic survey to elucidate the along-trench variation in the seismic structure of the forearc and to examine structural factors affecting the interplate coupling beneath the forearc mantle wedge. Seismic structure models derived from wide-angle traveltimes showed significant along-trench variation within the overlying plate. In a weakly coupled segment, (i) the sediment layer was thick and flat, (ii) the forearc upper crust was extremely thin, (iii) the forearc Moho was remarkably shallow (about 5 km), and (iv) the P-wave velocity within the forearc mantle wedge was low, whereas in the strongly coupled segments, opposite conditions were found. The good correlation between the seismic structure and the segmentation of the interplate coupling implies that variations in the forearc structure are closely related to those in the interplate coupling.


Earth, Planets and Space | 2012

Precise aftershock distribution of the 2011 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku Earthquake revealed by an ocean-bottom seismometer network

Masanao Shinohara; Yuya Machida; Tomoaki Yamada; Kazuo Nakahigashi; Takashi Shinbo; Kimihiro Mochizuki; Yoshio Murai; Ryota Hino; Yoshihiro Ito; Toshinori Sato; Hajime Shiobara; Kenji Uehira; Hiroshi Yakiwara; Koichiro Obana; Narumi Takahashi; Shuichi Kodaira; Kenji Hirata; Hiroaki Tsushima; Takaya Iwasaki

The 2011 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku Earthquake occurred at the plate boundary between the Pacific plate and the landward plate on March 11, 2011, and had a magnitude of 9. Many aftershocks occurred following the mainshock. Obtaining a precise aftershock distribution is important for understanding the mechanism of earthquake generation. In order to study the aftershock activity of this event, we carried out extensive sea-floor aftershock observations using more than 100 ocean-bottom seismometers just after the mainshock. A precise aftershock distribution for approximately three months over the whole source area was obtained from the observations. The aftershocks form a plane dipping landward over the whole area, nevertheless the epicenter distribution is not uniform. Comparing seismic velocity structures, there is no aftershock along the plate boundary where a large slip during the mainshock is estimated. Activity of aftershocks in the landward plate in the source region was high and normal fault-type, and strike-slip-type, mechanisms are dominant. Within the subducting oceanic plate, most earthquakes have also a normal fault-type, or strike-slip-type, mechanism. The stress fields in and around the source region change as a result of the mainshock.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Magmatic development of the outer Vøring margin from seismic data

A. J. Breivik; Jan Inge Faleide; Rolf Mjelde; Ernst R. Flueh; Yoshio Murai

The Voring Plateau off mid-Norway is a volcanic passive margin, located north of the East Jan Mayen Fracture Zone (EJMFZ). Large volumes of magmatic rocks were emplaced during Early Eocene margin formation. In 2003, an ocean bottom seismometer survey was acquired over the margin. One profile crosses from the Voring Plateau to the Voring Spur, a bathymetric high north of the EJMFZ. The P wave data were ray traced into a 2-D crustal velocity model. The velocity structure of the Voring Spur indicates up to 15 km igneous crustal thickness. Magmatic processes can be estimated by comparing seismic velocity (VP) with igneous thickness (H). This and two other profiles show a positive H-VP correlation at the Voring Plateau, consistent with elevated mantle temperature at breakup. However, during the first 2 Ma magma production was augmented by a secondary process, possibly small-scale convection. From ∼51.5 Ma excess melting may be caused by elevated mantle temperature alone. Seismic stratigraphy around the Voring Spur shows that it was created by at least two uplift events, with the main episode close to the Miocene/Pliocene boundary. Low H-VP correlation of the spur is consistent with renewed igneous growth by constant, moderate-degree mantle melting, not related to the breakup magmatism. The admittance function between bathymetry and free-air gravity shows that the high is near local isostatic equilibrium, precluding that compressional flexure at the EJMFZ uplifted the high. We find a proposed Eocene triple junction model for the margin to be inconsistent with observations.

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