Sakaguchi, Arito et al. (2011): Seismic slip propagation to the updip end of plate boundary subduction interface faults; vitrinite reflectance geothermometry on Integrated Ocean Drilling Program NanTro SEIZE cores

Leg/Site/Hole:
IODP 316 C0004
Identifier:
2011-038856
georefid

10.1130/G31642.1
doi

Creator:
Sakaguchi, Arito
Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC), Institute for Frontier Research on Earth Evolution (FREE), Kanagawa, Japan
author

Chester, Frederick
Texas A&M University, United States
author

Curewitz, Daniel
Syracuse University, United States
author

Fabbri, Olivier
Universite de Franche-Comte, France
author

Goldsby, David
Brown University, United States
author

Kimura, Gaku
University of Tokyo, Japan
author

Li Chunfeng
Tongji University, China
author

Masaki, Yuka
Kochi University, Japan
author

Screaton, Elizabeth J.
University of Florida, United States
author

Tsutsumi, Akito
Kyoto University, Japan
author

Ujiie, Kohtaro
Tsukuba University, Japan
author

Yamaguchi, Asuka
author

Identification:
Seismic slip propagation to the updip end of plate boundary subduction interface faults; vitrinite reflectance geothermometry on Integrated Ocean Drilling Program NanTro SEIZE cores
2011
Geology (Boulder)
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
39
4
395-398
Seismic faulting along subduction-type plate boundaries plays a fundamental role in tsunami genesis. During the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Nankai Trough Seismogenic Zone Experiment (NanTro SEIZE) Stage 1, the updip ends of plate boundary subduction faults were drilled and cored in the Nankai Trough (offshore Japan), where repeated large earthquakes and tsunamis have occurred, including the A.D. 1944 Tonankai (Mw=8.1) earthquake. Samples were obtained from the frontal thrust, which connects the deep plate boundary to the seafloor at the toe of the accretionary wedge, and from a megasplay fault that branches from the plate boundary decollement. The toe of the accretionary wedge has classically been considered aseismic, but vitrinite reflectance geothermometry reveals that the two examined fault zones underwent localized temperatures of more than 380 degrees C. This suggests that frictional heating occurred along these two fault zones, and implies that coseismic slip must have propagated at least one time to the updip end of the megasplay fault and to the toe of the accretionary wedge.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:33.1300
West:136.4300East: 136.4300
South:33.1300

Solid-earth geophysics; accretionary wedges; cores; coseismic processes; decollement; displacements; earthquakes; faults; friction; geologic hazards; geologic thermometry; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program; IODP Site C0004; Nankai Trough; NanTroSEIZE; natural hazards; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; Pacific Ocean; plate boundaries; plate tectonics; seismotectonics; subduction; tectonics; thrust faults; tsunamis; vitrinite reflectance; West Pacific;

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