Publication | Open Access
Indication of high pore-fluid pressures in a seismically-active fault zone
123
Citations
22
References
2002
Year
EngineeringEarthquake HazardsHigh Pore-fluid PressuresEarth ScienceGeotechnical EngineeringEarthquake SourceEarthquake EngineeringInduced SeismicitySeismic ImagingEarthquake RuptureShear-wave SplittingEngineering GeologyExperimental TectonicsRock PropertiesTectonicsFault GeometryStructural GeologySeismologyCivil EngineeringGeomechanicsNorthern IcelandSeismic HazardSeismic Shear-wave Splitting
Polarisations of seismic shear-wave splitting observed above small earthquakes in Iceland are typically approximately NE to SW, parallel to the direction of maximum horizontal stress. In contrast, the polarisations of shear-waves at three new stations sited over the Húsavík–Flatey Fault, a major seismically-active transform fault in northern Iceland, are approximately NW to SE, orthogonal to the stress-aligned polarisations elsewhere. Modelling suggests that these 90°-flips in polarisations are caused by propagation through cracks containing fluids at high pore-fluid pressures within one or two MPa of the critical stress. These observations suggest that high pore-fluid pressures, which play a key role in earthquake source mechanisms, can be monitored by analysing shear-wave splitting above seismically-active fault planes.
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