Frictional Properties and Healing Behavior of Tectonic Mélanges: Implications for the Evolution of Subduction Fault Zones

Author:

Chen T.‐W.12ORCID,Affinito R.1ORCID,Marone C.13ORCID,Fisher D.1ORCID,Smye A.1ORCID,Hashimoto Y.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geosciences Pennsylvania State University University Park PA USA

2. Department of Earth and Space Sciences University of Washington Seattle WA USA

3. Department of Earth Sciences La Sapienza University of Rome Rome Italy

4. Department of Applied Science, Faculty of Science Kochi University Kochi Japan

Abstract

AbstractThe frictional velocity dependence and healing behavior of subduction fault zones play key roles in the nucleation of stick‐slip instabilities at convergent margins. Diagenetic to low‐grade metamorphic processes such as pressure solution are proposed to be responsible for the change in frictional properties of fault materials along plate interfaces; pressure solution also likely contributes to the acceleration of healing according to previous studies. Here, we report friction studies for temperatures of 20–100°C and normal stresses from 20 to 125 MPa on samples collected from ancient subduction fault zones, the Lower Mugi and Makimine mélanges of the Cretaceous Shimanto belt. The two mélanges correspond to the updip and downdip limits of the seismogenic zone and include deformation features that indicate lower and higher degrees of pressure solution. Our data show that the Lower Mugi mélange exhibits velocity‐weakening to velocity‐neutral frictional behavior under low normal stress and that the Makimine mélange sample shows velocity‐strengthening behavior under high normal stress. We suggest that mineralogical changes due to diagenesis and metamorphism influence fault slip behavior. We measure frictional healing in slide‐hold‐slide experiments for the Lower Mugi mélange sample and document the role of pressure solution in fault healing. Our results show that frictional healing increases at higher temperatures. The microstructures related to pressure solution found in the post‐experimental gouges support the idea that the enhanced healing is related to pressure solution.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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