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Comparative properties of saponitic fault gouge and serpentinite muds cored from mud volcanoes of the Mariana subduction zone

April 21, 2025

We obtained 12 core samples for physical and chemical characterization from three serpentinite mud volcanoes (Yinazao, Asùt Tesoru, and Fantangisña) located on the forearc of the Mariana subduction system, that were drilled during International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 366. Two samples from the Fantangisña mud volcano are interpreted to be clay-rich fault gouges derived from the subduction channel. Their bulk compositions are intermediate between the serpentinites and oceanic basalts. The oceanic crustal materials in the gouges have been thoroughly metasomatized and the serpentinites extensively altered to the trioctahedral, Mg-rich smectite clays saponite and corrensite. The only relict phases in clasts of crustal rock are accessory Ti- and P-bearing minerals. The two fault gouge samples have lower frictional strengths (μ < 0.2) than the serpentinites (μ = 0.2–0.4), and their measured permeabilities are also somewhat lower. Their physical and compositional properties correspond to saponitic gouges from other faults that juxtapose serpentinite against crustal rocks, in particular gouges from the two creeping traces of the San Andreas Fault recovered in the core from the San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth. The décollement beneath Fantangisña mud volcano is thus expected to be very weak and likely characterized by stable slip.

Publication Year 2025
Title Comparative properties of saponitic fault gouge and serpentinite muds cored from mud volcanoes of the Mariana subduction zone
DOI 10.1029/2024GC012100
Authors Diane E. Moore, C.A. Morrow, David Lockner, Barbara A. Bekins
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Geophysics, Geochemistry, Geosystems
Index ID 70266004
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Earthquake Science Center
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