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Foreshock sequence prior to the 2024 M7.6 Noto-Hanto earthquake, Japan

Aitaro Kato, Takuya Nishimura

crossref(2024)

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Abstract
A destructive M7.6 earthquake occurred on January 1st, 2024, at shallow depths along the northern coast of Noto Peninsula on the back-arc side of Central Japan. The earthquake rupture started from an area where an intensive seismic swarm has lasted for more than 3 years (from December 2020). The seismic swarm consisted of numerous small planar faults dipping toward the southeast. In May 2023, an M6.5 event, that was the largest event before the M7.6 rupture, emanated from the swarm area toward shallow depths, resulting in the subsequent increase in the seismicity in the swarm area (Kato 2024 GRL). Then, the seismicity had gradually decayed to a level before the 2023 M6.5 event. Here we have explored the seismic and geodetic data to revel the nucleation process of the M7.6 event. Approximately two weeks before the M7.6 event, seismic activity exhibited a weak localization around the point of rupture initiation. After that, a foreshock sequence commenced roughly one hour before the occurrence of the M7.6 event, concentrated in proximity to the epicenter (within a 1-kilometer epicentral distance). The tightly clustered foreshock sequence consisted of around 20 events, including an M5.5 event 4 minutes prior and an M3 class event 1 second before the onset of M7.6 event. The M7.6 rupture nucleated from the deep side of one of planar clusters that were dominantly dipping toward the southeast direction. The growth process of the rupture in the M7.6 event is characterized by a complicated nature.
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