A trial extraction of crustal deformation from seafloor hydraulic pressure gauges to estimate interplate coupling for subduction plate boundaries

2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keisuke Ariyoshi ◽  
Akira Nagano ◽  
Takuya Hasegawa ◽  
Motoyuki Kido ◽  
Ryoko Nakata ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 45 (14) ◽  
pp. 6869-6877 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keiichi Tadokoro ◽  
Mamoru Nakamura ◽  
Masataka Ando ◽  
Hiroshi Kimura ◽  
Tsuyoshi Watanabe ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroyuki Matsumoto ◽  
Eiichiro Araki

DONET, the dense ocean-floor network system for earthquakes and tsunamis, began operations in the Nankai Trough, SW Japan, in 2010. The present study focuses on pressure sensors that are being used as tsunami meters to measure changes in hydraulic pressure. Pressure sensors typically show a drift in their readings over their operational lifespan. DONET pressure sensors can act as geodetic sensors measuring vertical crustal deformation change over time if the sensor drift can be accurately corrected. Monitoring crustal deformation before the occurrence of megathrust earthquakes is performed by discriminating between the vertical crustal deformation and the sensor drift of the pressure sensors. Therefore, in this study, we evaluated the sensor drift shown by the DONET pressure sensors since their deployment into the deep-sea, by removing the tidal component and confirming the occurrence of sensor drift. We evaluated the initial behavior of pressure sensors before deep-sea deployment using our own high-accuracy pressure standard. Our experiment involved 20-MPa pressurization for the pressure sensors under an ambient temperature of 2°C for a duration of 1 month. Some sensor drifts in our experiment correspond in rate and direction to those from the in-situ measurements determined to be in the initial stage. Our experiment suggests that the pre-deployment pressurization of pressure sensors can be an effective procedure to determine the sensor drift after sensor deployment into the deep-sea.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurent Jolivet

<div><span>Whether the deformation of continents is entirely caused by stresses transmitted from plate boundaries horizontally through the lithospheric stress-guide or also by viscous coupling with the asthenosphere flowing underneath, which was part of Arthur Holmes’ early vision,  is a long-standing question. An increasing amount of observations suggests an efficient coupling between mantle flow and crustal deformation far from plate boundaries, tipping the scale toward the second option. Modern seismic reflection profiles probing the entire crust down to the Moho show asymmetrical features implying simple shear at crustal scale in compressional (mountain belts) and extensional (rifts and passive margins) contexts. Comparison of crustal-scale strain field with seismic anisotropy in strongly extended regions shows homoaxiality of crustal and mantle deformation in continental rifts and back-arc regions. 2-D and 3-D numerical models show that the flow of mantle underneath these regions is faster than in the crust and drives crustal deformation. Beside seismic tomography that images ancient slabs preserved as velocity anomalies in the deep mantle but does not provide any information on the timing, the geological history of basins and orogens, although indirectly, is the only record of past mantle convection. Looking for evidence of coupling between the tectonic history of wide regions and mantle convection in parallel with numerical modelling can provide clues on how convection drives crustal deformation. The recent evolution of numerical modelling, with high-resolution 3-D experiments, can now match the first order of regional models based on geological observations, including the timing and the sequence of events, which are both crucial elements of geological models. This will allow testing complex conceptual models that have been discussed for long. In this lecture, I review different contexts where these questions are debated. Among these contexts complex in 3-D where the geological data set is abundant, the Mediterranean and the Middle East allow discussing the respective contributions of whole-mantle convection involving large plumes <em>vs</em> more local convection in the upper mantle due to slab dynamics in crustal deformation. Studying the dynamics of the India-Asia collision, and the respective roles of lithospheric-scale indentation on the one hand and asthenospheric flow due to slab retreat on the Pacific rim and to large-scale plumes, on the other hand, is also likely to bring interesting insights on how deformation propagates within continents at long distance from plate boundaries.</span></div>


Geology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neta Dembo ◽  
Roi Granot ◽  
Yariv Hamiel

The distribution of permanent deformation near strike-slip plate boundaries and the underlying controlling variables are commonly poorly understood. Here we examine the crustal deformation across the northern Dead Sea fault system based on paleomagnetic observations and mechanical modeling. We focus our investigation on the region of the Lebanese restraining bend where the fault system strikes obliquely to the general Sinai-Arabia plate motion. We construct a series of crustal elasto-plastic models in which kinematics is based on geodetic measurements, and the geometry of the plate boundary is constrained by gravity data. Both the observed regional vertical axis rotations and the model results display significant counterclockwise rotations (as much as ~50°) confined to the northern Sinai microplate located west of the bend. On the other hand, relatively minor rotations (<~10°) are displayed for the adjacent Arabian plate. Our results, validated by structural evidence, suggest that the northern Sinai microplate is mechanically weaker than the adjacent crust of the Arabian plate. This mechanical contrast, along with the oblique convergence and change of slip rate along the Dead Sea fault system, is required to simulate the observed rotations. We propose that the crustal mechanical contrast across plate boundaries is a key parameter responsible for the distribution pattern of permanent vertical axis rotations.


The state of stress and style of crustal deformation along weak transform plate boundaries is discussed in the context of available data and simple analytical models. Appreciable evidence indicates that while the frictional strength of the upper crust is high (in general accordance with simple faulting theory and laboratory-derived coefficients of friction), the frictional resistance to motion along transform plate boundaries is extremely low. These conditions require that horizontal principal stresses must be oriented approximately parallel and perpendicular to the transform-fault zone to minimize the shear stresses acting parallel to the transform. Along plate margins that must accommodate relative convergence (transpressive margins), a pattern of near fault-normal compression and fault-normal crustal shortening is expected. Along divergent plate margins (transtensional margins), extension is expected to occur perpendicular to the transform, as the direction of minimum horizontal principal stress is expected to be nearly perpendicular to it. These patterns of stress and deformation can be observed along a number of transform faults around the world.


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