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Scientific Drilling Into the San Andreas Fault zone San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth (SAFOD)

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Presentation on theme: "Scientific Drilling Into the San Andreas Fault zone San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth (SAFOD)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Scientific Drilling Into the San Andreas Fault zone San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth (SAFOD)

2 Objectives Understand the physical and chemical processes that control deformation and earthquake generation within active fault zones Make near-field observations of earthquake nucleation, propagation and arrest to test laboratory-derived concepts of faulting physics. Mechanically weak – Low heat flow – High-angle maximum principal stress S Hmax

3 Why Parkfield? Transition between the locked segment and aseismic creeping segment of the SAF 1857 M 8.2 Fort Tejon event 1906 M 7.8 San Francisco event Repeating earthquakes Shaded relief map of California (Hickman et al., 2004)

4 Repeating earthquakes M 6 EQs have occurred on the Parkfield section at fairly regular intervals - in 1857, 1881, 1901, 1922, 1934, 1966 and 2004 1922, 1934 and 1966 events ruptured the same segment of the fault in a similar manner Significant EQs in the Parkfield since 1850Comparison between 1922 and 1934 events

5 InSAR measurement Linear surface displacement rate between 1993 and 2004 (de Michele et al., 2011) SAFOD The bimodal distribution is consistent with right strike- slip motion The sharp discontinuity in the InSAR signal is a direct consequence of the surface creep The sharpness fades progressively to SE PKF

6 Other measurements The coseismic moment release of the 2004 event is as little as 25% of the total (Johanson et al., 2006) The creep rate from InSAR is consistent with short-range EDM, creepmeter, and alignment array Along-strike surface slip of the SAF from NW to SE (de Michele et al., 2011)

7 Geological & Geophysical Cross-sections Pilot Hole: 2.2-km-deep, drilled through Salinian granite Main Hole: penetrated two actively deforming zones as SDZ and CDZ at ~2.7 km vertical depth Resistivity structure from surface magnetotellurics (Hickman et al., 2004) Geologic cross-section parrallel to the trajectory of SAFOD (Zoback et al., 2011)

8 Geophysical logs from Main Hole Geophysical logs as a function of measured depth (Hickman et al., 2004) Damage Zone – ~200-m-wide – Low P and S velocities, low resistivity – Result of both physical damage and chemical alteration of the rocks due to faulting and fault- related minerals

9 Friction experiment Stepping tests – slip velocity is suddenly increased by an order of magnitude – Friction increases immediately then decay to a new steady- state value Slide-hold-slide tests – Steady-state sliding is followed by a holding for t – followed by a resumption of slip at the former slip velocity Experimental data and frictional-healing determination (Carpenter et al., 2012)

10 Friction behavior: fault gouge Powdered, clay-rich foliated gouge Frictional strength is as low as μ=0.21 in the fault zone SEM image showing shear zones in clay- rich foliated gouge (Carpenter et al., 2011) Frictional strength and healing behavior (Carpenter et al., 2011)

11 Friction behavior: intact cores Intact fabric, saponite and smectite clay Fault zone rock is extraordinary weak (μ=0.09-0.25), with the lowest friction values in the center of the fault Coefficient of sliding friction (Carpenter et al., 2012) Mohr-Coulomb failure envelope (Carpenter et al., 2012)

12 Summary The laboratory data offer a coherent explanation for the weakness of the SAF The intact samples have different friction behavior from the powdered samples due to the mineral fabric.


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