Idosawa Fault


The Idosawa Fault, also referred to as the Shionihara Fault, is an active earthquake fault system located in Fukushima Prefecture of Japan, to the west of Iwaki city. It mainly consists of a trace of three separate striations.

Structure

The fault was first mapped by the Active Fault Research Group in 1991 as a complex of north-northwest-striking inactive traces of fault in the Hamadōri region. It has since been compartmentalized into separate striations near Tabito-cho west of Iwaki city. The northernmost and largest of the faultlines, the North Fault, was identified in 2009 and extends roughly 24 km from the southeast to the northwest. To its southwest, two parallel faultlines, the East and Shionihara faults, extend from the south-southeast to the north-northwest. The faultlines are separated by 1 km and span roughly 23 km and 22 km, respectively. The westernmost of the two, the Shionihara Fault lies near Tabito-cho and borders the small village of Shionohira, after which it was named.
The main structural trend is north-northwest-south-southeast, with sinking observed only to the south on the east side of the fault. Metamorphic rock and Cretaceous strata, as well as granite and epidiorite are distributed in the region; the fault is described as a limit to the distribution of tuff from the Neogene Period.

Yunodake Fault

To the northeast of the Idosawa Fault complex lies a separate normal fault trace, which was named the Yunodake Fault in 2011. Distanced approx. 50 km from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, the fault had been dormant for 120,000-130,000 before it ruptured during the magnitude 7.1 Mw Fukushima Hamadori earthquake on 11 April 2011. Several geological surveys have since been conducted in its vicinity. Evidence of sedimentary rock layers deposited after the Late Pleistocene beneath the fault suggests that the Yunotake Fault had been in the active in the past.

Notable earthquakes