Microscale cavitation as a mechanism for nucleating earthquakes at the base of the seismogenic zone

Publication date

2017-11-21

Authors

Verberne, Berend A.ISNI 0000000419534993
Chen, JianyeISNI 0000000449450942
Niemeijer, Andre RikISNI 0000000436376624
de Bresser, HansISNI 0000000047156214
Pennock, Gill M.ISNI 0000000387868154
Drury, MartynORCID 0000-0002-2246-2009ISNI 000000039058593X
Spiers, ChrisISNI 0000000394256746

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Article
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Abstract

Major earthquakes frequently nucleate near the base of the seismogenic zone, close to the brittle-ductile transition. Fault zone rupture at greater depths is inhibited by ductile flow of rock. However, the microphysical mechanisms responsible for the transition from ductile flow to seismogenic brittle/frictional behaviour at shallower depths remain unclear. Here we show that the flow-to-friction transition in experimentally simulated calcite faults is characterized by a transition from dislocation and diffusion creep to dilatant deformation, involving incompletely accommodated grain boundary sliding. With increasing shear rate or decreasing temperature, dislocation and diffusion creep become too slow to accommodate the imposed shear strain rate, leading to intergranular cavitation, weakening, strain localization, and a switch from stable flow to runaway fault rupture. The observed shear instability, triggered by the onset of microscale cavitation, provides a key mechanism for bringing about the brittle-ductile transition and for nucleating earthquakes at the base of the seismogenic zone.

Keywords

Geophysics, Nanoparticles, Natural hazards, Tectonics

Citation

Verberne, B A, Chen, J, Niemeijer, A R, de Bresser, J H P, Pennock, G M, Drury, M R & Spiers, C J 2017, 'Microscale cavitation as a mechanism for nucleating earthquakes at the base of the seismogenic zone', Nature Communications, vol. 8, 1645. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-01843-3