Poster #156, Fault and Rupture Mechanics (FARM)
Characterizing shallow slow slip with natural and experimental hematite fault surfaces
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Poster Presentation
2021 SCEC Annual Meeting, Poster #156, SCEC Contribution #11520 VIEW PDF
reworked clasts of hematite, indicate failure via fluid overpressure and subsequent slip at subseismic rates. Hematite (U-Th)/He dates record two periods of mineralization and slip at depths of <1.5 km during exhumation prior to ~0.8 Ma and from ~0.8-0.4 Ma. Together, fault microstructures and thermochronometry document periods of shallow slow slip events in the past ~1 Ma within the PCF damage zone.
Deformation experiments inform He loss and microstructures associated with controlled, observable slip rates. Prior high-velocity (320 mm/s) rotary shear experiments (Calzolari et al., 2020) were conducted with specular hematite comprising μm-thick plates and a SiC upper annulus at 8.5 MPa load for 1.5 m displacement. Resulting slip surfaces have fault mirrors and gouge, and (U-Th)/He dates from mirrored material indicate >70% He loss associated with friction-generated temperature rise. New low-velocity and low-displacement experiments utilize the same apparatus, load, and starting material, but with a diabase upper annulus and 0.85 um/s to 1 cm/s slip rate for 1 cm to 1.5 m displacement. These experiments yield a ~0.3-0.4 coefficient of friction and lower volume of gouge compared to high-velocity, high-displacement experiments. Ongoing work will identify gouge morphology and He loss associated with these slow slip experiments for comparison with results from high-velocity and natural PCF surfaces. We will also explore He loss in fine-grained gouge prepared from specularite boulders, as well as microstructures and frictional properties, including the velocity-dependence of friction, in gouge prepared from coarser-grained specularite and natural Mecca Hills hematite slip surfaces to assess the impact of hematite morphology and interstitial phases on slip accommodation.
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Deformation experiments inform He loss and microstructures associated with controlled, observable slip rates. Prior high-velocity (320 mm/s) rotary shear experiments (Calzolari et al., 2020) were conducted with specular hematite comprising μm-thick plates and a SiC upper annulus at 8.5 MPa load for 1.5 m displacement. Resulting slip surfaces have fault mirrors and gouge, and (U-Th)/He dates from mirrored material indicate >70% He loss associated with friction-generated temperature rise. New low-velocity and low-displacement experiments utilize the same apparatus, load, and starting material, but with a diabase upper annulus and 0.85 um/s to 1 cm/s slip rate for 1 cm to 1.5 m displacement. These experiments yield a ~0.3-0.4 coefficient of friction and lower volume of gouge compared to high-velocity, high-displacement experiments. Ongoing work will identify gouge morphology and He loss associated with these slow slip experiments for comparison with results from high-velocity and natural PCF surfaces. We will also explore He loss in fine-grained gouge prepared from specularite boulders, as well as microstructures and frictional properties, including the velocity-dependence of friction, in gouge prepared from coarser-grained specularite and natural Mecca Hills hematite slip surfaces to assess the impact of hematite morphology and interstitial phases on slip accommodation.
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