| Literature DB >> 15591198 |
Yuki Sawai1, Kenji Satake, Takanobu Kamataki, Hiroo Nasu, Masanobu Shishikura, Brian F Atwater, Benjamin P Horton, Harvey M Kelsey, Tamotsu Nagumo, Masaaki Yamaguchi.
Abstract
In eastern Hokkaido, 60 to 80 kilometers above a subducting oceanic plate, tidal mudflats changed into freshwater forests during the first decades after a 17th-century tsunami. The mudflats gradually rose by a meter, as judged from fossil diatom assemblages. Both the tsunami and the ensuing uplift exceeded any in the region's 200 years of written history, and both resulted from a shallow plate-boundary earthquake of unusually large size along the Kuril subduction zone. This earthquake probably induced more creep farther down the plate boundary than did any of the region's historical events.Year: 2004 PMID: 15591198 DOI: 10.1126/science.1104895
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728