Potential Role of Volcanic Glass‐Smectite Mixtures in Slow Earthquakes in Shallow Subduction Zones: Insights From Low‐ to High‐Velocity Friction Experiments

  • Hanaya Okuda
    Department of Ocean Floor Geoscience Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute University of Tokyo Kashiwa Japan
  • Takehiro Hirose
    Kochi Institute for Core Sample Research (X‐star) Japan Agency for Marine‐Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC) Nankoku Japan
  • Asuka Yamaguchi
    Department of Ocean Floor Geoscience Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute University of Tokyo Kashiwa Japan

書誌事項

公開日
2023-07-31
資源種別
journal article
権利情報
  • http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
DOI
  • 10.1029/2022jb026156
  • 10.22541/essoar.167170198.83984589/v1
公開者
American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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説明

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>Volcanic glass and its mixture with smectite are commonly observed in shallow parts of subduction zones. As volcanic glass layers often act as glide planes in submarine landslides, and because its alteration product, smectite, is one of the frictionally weakest geological materials, the frictional characteristics of volcanic glass‐smectite mixtures are important for fault slip behavior in shallow parts of subduction zones. We performed a series of friction experiments on volcanic glass‐smectite mixtures with different smectite contents from 0% to 100% at various velocity conditions from 10 μm/s to 1 m/s under an effective normal stress of 5 MPa and pore pressure of 10 MPa. In general, apparent friction coefficients negatively depend on the smectite content at any velocity tested. We found that samples with smectite contents of 15%–30% showed a drastic slip‐weakening behavior at intermediate velocities of 1–3 mm/s. Finite element method modeling shows that thermal pressurization does not contribute to the observed weakening behavior. The critical nucleation length estimated from the slip‐weakening behavior is approximately 1–10 km, which is large enough to prevent the slip to accelerate to seismic slip velocity. Therefore, gouges with minor amount of clay, such as subducting volcanic ash layers, may contribute to the occurrence of the slow earthquakes at shallow depths in subduction zones.</jats:p>

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