The Sofu Seamount Present in the Source Area of the October 2023
Earthquake and Tsunami in Japan
Abstract
On October 8, 2023 (UTC), unique earthquakes occurred in the
Izu-Ogasawara Arc, Japan, in which the P- and S-phases were barely
visible and only the T-phase was evident, followed by tsunamis that
reached islands in the Izu-Ogasawara Arc and a wide area of the Pacific
coast of southwest Japan. In the location where the T-phase source was
estimated, there is the Sofu Seamount which was previously unrecognized
as an active submarine volcano. A bathymetric survey of the seamount
conducted one month after the event revealed characteristics of the
seamount with a caldera and a central cone. Compared to the bathymetry
in 1987, the topography in the caldera had changed significantly such as
a crater forming in the central cone. This seamount is likely to be an
active volcano. The topographic changes on the caldera-sized scale that
occurred at the caldera can be explained as a source of the October
tsunami.