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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 101, NO. B5,
PAGES 11,305–11,315,
1996
Can the Okhotsk plate be discriminated from the North American plate?
Tetsuzo Seno
Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
Taro Sakurai
Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
Seth Stein
Department of Geological Sciences, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois
Abstract
The plate geometry in northeast Asia has been a long-standing question, with a major issue being whether the Sea of Okhotsk
and northern Japanese islands are better regarded as part of the North American plate or as a separate Okhotsk plate. This
question has been difficult to resolve, because earthquake slip vectors along the Kuril and Japan trenches are consistent
with either Pacific-North America or Pacific-Okhotsk plate motion. To circumvent this difficulty, we also use slip vectors
of earthquakes along Sakhalin Island and the eastern margin of the Japan Sea and compare them to the predicted Eurasia-Okhotsk
and Eurasia-North America motions. For a model with a separate Okhotsk plate, we invert 10 Eurasia-Okhotsk and 255 Pacific-Okhotsk
slip vectors with Pacific-North America and Eurasia-North America NUVEL-1 data. Alternatively, for a model without an Okhotsk
plate, those Eurasia-Okhotsk and Pacific-Okhotsk data are regarded as Eurasia-North America and Pacific-North America data,
respectively. The model with an Okhotsk plate fits the data better than one in which this region is treated as part of the
North American plate. Because the improved fit exceeds that expected purely from the additional plate, the data indicate that
the Okhotsk plate can be resolved from the North American plate. The motions on the Okhotsk plate's boundaries predicted by
the best fitting Euler vectors are generally consistent with the recent tectonics. The Eurasia-Okhotsk pole is located at
northernmost Sakhalin Island and predicts right-lateral strike slip motion on the NNE striking fault plane of the May 27,
1995, Neftegorsk earthquake, consistent with the centroid moment tensor focal mechanism and the surface faulting. Along the
northern boundary of the Okhotsk plate, the North America-Okhotsk Euler vector predicts left-lateral strike slip, consistent
with the observed focal mechanisms. On the NW boundary of the Okhotsk plate, the Eurasia-Okhotsk Euler vector predicts E-W
extension, discordant with the limited focal mechanisms and geological data. This misfit may imply that another plate is necessary
west of the Magadan region in southeast Siberia, but this possibility is hard to confirm without further data, such as might
be obtained from space-based geodesy.
Received 8
May
1995;
accepted 6
February
1996.
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Citation: Seno, T., T. Sakurai, and S. Stein
(1996),
Can the Okhotsk plate be discriminated from the North American plate?,
J. Geophys. Res.,
101(B5),
11,305–11,315.
Copyright 1996 by the American Geophysical Union.
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