日本地球惑星科学連合2015年大会

講演情報

インターナショナルセッション(ポスター発表)

セッション記号 S (固体地球科学) » S-SS 地震学

[S-SS02] Frontier studies on subduction zone megathrust earthquakes and tsunamis

2015年5月25日(月) 18:15 〜 19:30 コンベンションホール (2F)

コンビーナ:*金川 久一(千葉大学大学院理学研究科)、Demian Saffer(Dept. of Geosciences, The Pennsylvania State University, USA)、Michael Strasser(Geological Institute, Seiss Federal Insitute of Technology ETH Zurich)、山田 泰広(京都大学工学研究科都市社会工学専攻)、小平 秀一(海洋研究開発機構 地球内部ダイナミクス領域)、日野 亮太(東北大学災害科学国際研究所)、氏家 恒太郎(筑波大学生命環境系)、伊藤 喜宏(京都大学防災研究所)

18:15 〜 19:30

[SSS02-P05] Frictional properties of subducting oceanic sediments and rocks at a shallow Japan Trench condition and slow slip rates

*星野 紘輝1金川 久一1 (1.Department of Earth Sciences, Chiba University)

キーワード:friction, basalt, chert, pelagic clay, hemipelagic clay, Japan Trench

We conducted triaxial friction experiments on gouges of subducting oceanic sediments and rocks at a confining pressure of 81 MPa, a pore pressure of 76 MPa, a temperature of 27.5 ℃, and a constant slip rate of 1.155 μm/s. Samples used are basalt of the Philippine Sea plate cored from IODP Site C0012 off Kii Peninsula, chert of the Pacific plate cored from IODP Site C0019 near Japan Trench off Tohoku, and pelagic and hemipelagic clays of the Pacific plate cored from DSDP Site 436 off Tohoku. Experimental confining pressure, pore pressure and temperature are those supposed at the plate boundary fault zone near Japan Trench drilled through during the IODP Exp. 343. Confining and pore pressures were estimated from the density log profile obtained during the Exp. 343 and assuming a hydrostatic condition, respectively, while temperature was a value recorded in a hole at Site C0019 after 7 months of drilling. The steady-state friction coefficient after a displacement of ≈5 mm was ≈0.65 for basalt and chert, ≈0.4 for hemipelagic clay, and ≈0.1 for pelagic clay. Thus the frictional strength of pelagic clay is unusually low, which is ascribed to its abundance in clay minerals (≈89 wt%), particularly smectite (≈63 wt%). This implies that a décollement is likely formed in the pelagic clay layer at Japan Trench off Tohoku, which was in fact found to be true by drilling during the IODP Exp. 343. We will also show the results of friction experiments at a slip rate of 11.55 μm/s, and discuss the velocity dependence of steady-state friction as well.