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Slow slip along the Hikurangi margin linked to fluid-rich sediments trailing subducting seamounts
被引:0
|作者:
Nathan L. Bangs
Julia K. Morgan
Rebecca E. Bell
Shuoshuo Han
Ryuta Arai
Shuichi Kodaira
Andrew C. Gase
Xinming Wu
Richard Davy
Laura Frahm
Hannah L. Tilley
Daniel H. N. Barker
Joel H. Edwards
Harold J. Tobin
Tim J. Reston
Stuart A. Henrys
Gregory F. Moore
Dan Bassett
Richard Kellett
Valerie Stucker
Bill Fry
机构:
[1] University of Texas at Austin,Institute for Geophysics, Jackson School of Geosciences
[2] Rice University,Department of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences
[3] Imperial College,Department of Earth Science and Engineering
[4] Japan Agency for Marine–Earth Science and Technology,School of Earth and Space Sciences
[5] University of Science and Technology of China,Department of Earth Sciences
[6] University of Hawai’i at Manoa,Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences
[7] Marinespace,Department of Earth and Space Science
[8] GNS Science,School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Science
[9] University of California,undefined
[10] Zanskar Geothermal & Minerals,undefined
[11] Inc,undefined
[12] University of Washington,undefined
[13] University of Birmingham,undefined
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摘要:
Large seamounts and basement relief cause permanent deformation when they collide with the overriding plate at subduction zones. The resulting structural and compositional heterogeneities have been implicated as controlling factors in megathrust slip behaviour. Subducting seamounts may temporarily lock plates, favouring subsequent large earthquakes. Alternatively, seamounts may redistribute stress, reducing seismic slip. Here we present three-dimensional seismic data from the seamount-studded subducting Hikurangi Plateau along New Zealand’s North Island. We find that one well-imaged seamount, the Pāpaku Seamount, locally uplifts the overriding plate and leaves a tube-shaped lens of sediment trailing in its wake. Anomalously low seismic velocities within and below the Pāpaku lens and along the megathrust fault are consistent with the presence of unconsolidated, overpressured fluid-rich sediments. Similar observations from an older sediment lens, which corresponds to the location of a 2014 slow-slip rupture event, suggest that such overpressures can persist along the megathrust due to delayed drainage out of the subducting plate. The collocation of the 2014 slow-slip earthquake with this sediment lens suggests that these fluid-rich regions define zones that enable slow slip. We hypothesize that sediment lenses left behind by subducting seamounts can create low-effective-stress patches within transitionally stable marine sediment along the megathrust that are conducive to slow slip.
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页码:505 / 512
页数:7
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