日本地球惑星科学連合2019年大会

講演情報

[E] ポスター発表

セッション記号 S (固体地球科学) » S-CG 固体地球科学複合領域・一般

[S-CG50] Intraslab and intraplate earthquakes

2019年5月30日(木) 15:30 〜 17:00 ポスター会場 (幕張メッセ国際展示場 8ホール)

コンビーナ:北 佐枝子(建築研究所)、大内 智博(愛媛大学地球深部ダイナミクス研究センター)、Marcel Thielmann(Bavarian Geoinstitute, University of Bayreuth)、奥脇 亮(産業技術総合研究所 地質調査総合センター 活断層・火山研究部門)

[SCG50-P07] Stable fault slip in antigorite-olivine aggregates at high pressures

池原 舞1、*久保 友明1岩里 拓弥2肥後 祐司3今村 公裕1丹下 慶範3 (1.九州大学、2.新日本非破壊検査(株)、3.JASRI)

Intermediate-depth earthquakes are observed to occur within subducting oceanic plates at depths of about 60-300 km where most materials exhibit plastic deformation rather than brittle failure, owing to high pressures and temperatures. Dehydration embrittlement of hydrous minerals, particularly antigorite serpentine, is one of the most popular hypotheses for explaining shear instability under such conditions (e.g., Raleigh and Paterson, 1965). Recent high-pressure deformation experiments, monitoring Acoustic Emission (AE) activities upon syndeformational antigorite dehydration, showed that dehydration embrittlement was not observed on single-phase antigorite (Gasc et al., 2017), whereas dehydration related faulting was formed on antigorite-olivine aggregates with strong AEs (Ferrand et al., 2017). However, most of the previous high-pressure studies have been conducted in axial compression at relatively low pressures (< 3.5 GPa), insufficient to consider intermediate-depth earthquakes. Therefore, in this study, we conducted high-pressure shear deformation experiments on two-phase aggregates of antigorite and olivine, considering partially serpentinized peridotites, in order to investigate possible shear localization and shear instability up to 7 GPa.
Deformation experiments were conducted at 5-7 GPa, 350-700 ℃ using Deformation-DIA apparatuses at SPring-8 (BL04B1). Monochromatic X-rays (50-60 keV) were used to measure dehydration kinetics, shear strain and stress with recording AEs. We used three kinds of starting materials; natural cored antigorite from Kawarakoba in Nagasaki prefecture, forsterite polycrystal, and two-phase sintered mixtures of antigorite and San Carlos olivine (antigorite 10, 30, 50 vol %). The samples were cut into disks having thickness of 300 µm and used for a shear deformation study by being assembled between two 45°-cut alumina pistons. In shear deformation experiments, the starting disk was compressed to 5 or 7 GPa at room temperature, annealed at 350 or 400 ℃ for 1 h, and then deformed with an anvil displacement rate of 200 µm/h. In some experiments, we increased temperature during shear deformation with a ramping rate of 0.1 ℃/sec to induce dehydration reaction. Microstructures of the recovered samples were examined by an optical microscope and a scanning electron microscope (SEM).
From X-ray radiography images, we observed shear localization in all two-phase samples deformed within the antigorite stability field at 5 GPa. The locallization occurred when homogeneous shear strain γ reached 0.4-0.9 (strain rate 1.3-2.2 × 10-4/s), and then most strains were partitioned to the fault zone with the slip velocity of 4.6-9.1 × 10-2 µm/s. Because no AEs were detected from the sample region, the localized deformation is thought to occur by stable sliding. SEM observations revealed that a thin shear deformation zone was formed along the fault, where the plastic deformation of both antigorite and olivine was significant. Striation and nanograins were observed on the fault plane, suggesting the formation of nanogouge. In contrast, homogeneous deformation was developed during antigorite dehydration with temperature ramping, even in the sample showing shear localization in the antigorite stability field. Under higher pressure condition 7 GPa, shear localization did not occur in all samples regardless of temperature. These results suggest that, although AE activities were detected with the dehydration in the antigorite-olivine aggregates up to 3.5 GPa in the previous study, further increase of pressure inhibits shear instability and shear localization. Thus, other dehydration reactions and/or instability mechanisms are required to explain intermediate-depth earthquakes deeper than ~100 km.