PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Slippery fault unleashed destructive Tohoku-Oki earthquake and tsunami

First measurement of friction during an earthquake yields surprisingly low value

2013-12-06
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Tim Stephens
stephens@ucsc.edu
831-459-2495
University of California - Santa Cruz
Slippery fault unleashed destructive Tohoku-Oki earthquake and tsunami First measurement of friction during an earthquake yields surprisingly low value

For the first time, scientists have measured the frictional heat produced by the fault slip during an earthquake. Their results, published December 5 in Science, show that friction on the fault was remarkably low during the magnitude 9.0 Tohoku-Oki earthquake that struck off the coast of Japan in March 2011 and triggered a devastating tsunami.

"The Tohoku fault is more slippery than anyone expected," said Emily Brodsky, a geophysicist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and coauthor of three papers on the Tohoku-Oki earthquake published together in Science. All three papers are based on results from the international Japan Trench Fast Drilling Project (JFAST), which Brodsky helped organize.

Because friction generates heat (like rubbing your hands together), taking the temperature of a fault after an earthquake can provide a measure of the fault's frictional resistance to slip. But that hasn't been easy to do. "It's been difficult to get this measurement because the signal is weak and it dissipates over time, so we needed a big earthquake and a rapid response," said Brodsky, a professor of Earth and planetary sciences at UCSC.

The JFAST expedition drilled across the Tohoku fault in 2012 and installed a temperature observatory in one of three boreholes nearly 7 kilometers below the ocean surface. The logistically and technically challenging operation successfully recovered temperature measurements and other data as well as core samples from across the fault.

The low resistance to slip on the fault may help explain the large amount of slip--an unprecedented 50 meters of displacement--that occurred during the earthquake, according to UC Santa Cruz researcher Patrick Fulton, who is first author of the paper focusing on the temperature measurements. An abundance of weak, slippery clay material in the fault zone--described in the two companion papers--may account for the low friction during the earthquake, he said.

The Tohoku-Oki earthquake occurred in a "subduction zone," a boundary between two tectonic plates where one plate is diving beneath another--in this case, the Pacific plate dives beneath the Eurasian plate just east of Japan. Fulton explained that the epicenter, where the earthquake started, was much deeper than the shallow portion of the fault examined by JFAST. One of the surprising things about the earthquake, in addition to the 50 meters of slip, was that the fault ruptured all the way to the surface of the seafloor.

"The large slip at shallow depths contributed to the tsumani that caused so much damage in Japan. Usually, these earthquakes don't rupture all the way to the surface," Fulton said.

The strain that is released in a subduction zone earthquake is thought to build up in the deep portion of the fault where the two plates are "locked." The shallow portion of the fault was not expected to accumulate a large amount of stress and was considered unlikely to produce a large amount of slip. The JFAST results show that the frictional stress on the shallow portion of the fault was very low during the earthquake, which means that either the stress was low to begin with or all of the stress was released during the earthquake.

"It's probably a combination of both--the fault was pretty slippery to begin with, and whatever stress was on the fault at that shallow depth was all released during the earthquake," Fulton said.

An earlier paper by JFAST researchers, published in Science in February 2013 (Lin et al.), also suggested a nearly total stress drop during the earthquake based on an analysis of geophysical data collected during drilling.

"We now have four lines of evidence that frictional stress was low during the earthquake," Brodsky said. "The key measure is temperature, but those results are totally consistent with the other papers."

One of the new papers (Ujiie et al.) presents the results of laboratory experiments on the material recovered from the fault zone. Tests showed very low shear stress (resistance to slip) attributable to the abundance of weak, slippery clay material. The other paper (Chester et al.) focuses on the geology and structure of the fault zone. In addition to the high clay content, the researchers found that the fault zone was surprisingly thin (less than 5 meters thick).

J. Casey Moore, a research professor of Earth sciences at UCSC and coauthor of the Chester et al. paper, said he suspects the clay layer observed in the Tohoku fault zone may play an important role in other fault zones. "Looking for something like that clay may give us a tool to understand the locations of earthquakes that cause tsunamis. It's potentially a predictive tool," Moore said.

According to Brodsky, measuring the frictional forces on the fault is the key to a fundamental understanding of earthquake mechanics. "We've been hamstrung without in situ measurements of frictional stress, and we now have that from the temperature data," she said. "It's hard to say how generalizable these results are until we look at other faults, but this lays the foundation for a better understanding of earthquakes and, ultimately, a better ability to identify earthquake hazards."



INFORMATION:



JFAST operations were carried out during Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Expedition 343/343T on board the scientific drilling vessel Chikyu, operated by the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC). Instruments and data were recovered from the borehole observatory by the research vessel Kairei, also operated by JAMSTEC. The data analysis was funded by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation through a grant to Emily Brodsky.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Malignant cells adopt a different pathway for genome duplication

2013-12-06
Malignant cells adopt a different pathway for genome duplication Researchers at the University of Geneva, Switzerland, discover how tumour cells solve the problems linked to the replication of their unstable DNA Genomes must be replicated in two copies ...

Resistant against the flu

2013-12-06
Resistant against the flu A genetic defect protects mice from infection with Influenza viruses This news release is available in German. A new study published in the scientific journal PLOS Pathogens points out that mice lacking ...

HIV can infect transplanted kidneys in HIV-positive recipients with undetectable virus

2013-12-06
HIV can infect transplanted kidneys in HIV-positive recipients with undetectable virus Findings help explain why HIV is a common cause of kidney failure Washington, DC (December 5, 2013) — HIV can infect transplanted kidneys in HIV-positive recipients even in the absence ...

Brain cancer cells hide while drugs seek

2013-12-06
Brain cancer cells hide while drugs seek Tumor cells temporarily lose mutation to evade drugs targeting mutation A team of scientists, led by principal investigator Paul S. Mischel, MD, a member of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research and professor ...

Acute kidney injury may be more deadly than heart attacks

2013-12-06
Acute kidney injury may be more deadly than heart attacks Improved prevention and therapy urgently needed Washington, DC (December 5, 2013) — Acute kidney injury, a condition that is common but often asymptomatic, may be more deadly than a heart attack, according to a ...

Deep-sea study reveals cause of 2011 tsunami

2013-12-06
Deep-sea study reveals cause of 2011 tsunami Drilling in Japan Trench by international scientific team finds unusually thin, slippery geological fault The devastating tsunami that struck Japan's Tohoku region in March 2011 was touched off by a submarine ...

Cancer's game of hide-and-seek

2013-12-06
Cancer's game of hide-and-seek Researchers describe a novel mechanism by which glioblastoma tumors resist targeted therapies December 5, 2013, New York, NY– A Ludwig Cancer Research study has uncovered an entirely novel mechanism by which glioblastoma ...

Scientists calculate friction of Japan's 9.0 earthquake in 2011

2013-12-06
Scientists calculate friction of Japan's 9.0 earthquake in 2011 CORVALLIS, Ore. – An international team of scientists that installed a borehole temperature observatory following the 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake in Japan has been able to measure the "frictional ...

Cancer mutation likely trigger of scleroderma

2013-12-06
Cancer mutation likely trigger of scleroderma Findings could reshape research on cancer origins and treatment of other autoimmune diseases Johns Hopkins scientists have found evidence that cancer triggers the autoimmune disease scleroderma, which causes thickening and ...

7 world-class cities riding tall in bike-share boom, solving 'the last mile' without cars

2013-12-06
PUBLIC RELEASE DATE: 5-Dec-2013 [ | E-mail ] var addthis_pub="eurekalert"; var addthis_options = "favorites, delicious, digg, facebook, twitter, google, newsvine, reddit, slashdot, stumbleupon, buzz, more" Share Contact: Jemilah Magnusson jemilah.magnusson@itdp.org 646-380-2357 Dan Klotz dklotz@burnesscommunications.com 301-280-5756 Burness Communications 7 world-class cities riding tall in bike-share boom, solving 'the last mile' without cars ITDP issues first-ever planning guide to shape the next wave of bike-share systems; More than 400 ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Transcatheter or surgical treatment of patients with aortic stenosis at low to intermediate risk

Promising new drug for people with stubborn high blood pressure

One shot of RSV vaccine effective against hospitalization in older adults for two seasons

Bivalent RSV prefusion F protein–based vaccine for preventing cardiovascular hospitalizations in older adults

Clonal hematopoiesis and risk of new-onset myocarditis and pericarditis

Risk of myocarditis or pericarditis with high-dose vs standard-dose influenza vaccine

High-dose vs standard-dose influenza vaccine and cardiovascular outcomes in older adults

Prevalence, determinants, and time trends of cardiovascular health in the WHO African region

New study finds that, after a heart attack, women have worse prognosis when treated with beta-blockers

CNIC-led REBOOT clinical trial challenges 40-year-old standard of care for heart attack patients

Systolic blood pressure and microaxial flow pump–associated survival in infarct-related cardiogenic shock

Beta blockers, the standard treatment after a heart attack, may offer no benefit for heart attack patients and women can have worse outcomes

High Mountain Asia’s shrinking glaciers linked to monsoon changes

All DRII-ed up: How do plants recover after drought?

Research on stigma says to just ‘shake it off’

Scientists track lightning “pollution” in real time using NASA satellite

Millions of women rely on contraceptives, but new Rice study shows they may do more than just prevent pregnancy

Hot days make for icy weather, Philippine study finds

Roxana Mehran, MD, receives the most prestigious award given by the European Society of Cardiology

World's first clinical trial showing lubiprostone aids kidney function

Capturing language change through the genes

Public trust in elections increases with clear facts

Thawing permafrost raised carbon dioxide levels after the last ice age

New DNA test reveals plants’ hidden climate role

Retinitis pigmentosa mouse models reflect pathobiology of human RP59

Cell’s ‘antenna’ could be key to curing diseases

Tiny ocean partnership between algae and bacteria reveals secrets of evolution

Scientists uncover cellular “toolkit” to reprogram immune cells for cancer therapy

Blocking protein control pathway slows rhabdomyosarcoma growth in mice

2026 Hertz Fellowship Application Now Open

[Press-News.org] Slippery fault unleashed destructive Tohoku-Oki earthquake and tsunami
First measurement of friction during an earthquake yields surprisingly low value