TY - JOUR
T1 - Permeability and pressure measurements in Lesser Antilles submarine slides
T2 - Evidence for pressure-driven slow-slip failure
AU - Hornbach, Matthew J.
AU - Manga, Michael
AU - Genecov, Michael
AU - Valdez, Robert
AU - Miller, Peter
AU - Saffer, Demian
AU - Adelstein, Esther
AU - Lafuerza, Sara
AU - Adachi, Tatsuya
AU - Breitkreuz, Christoph
AU - Jutzeler, Martin
AU - Le Friant, Anne
AU - Ishizuka, Osamu
AU - Morgan, Sally
AU - Slagle, Angela
AU - Talling, Peter J.
AU - Fraass, Andrew
AU - Watt, Sebastian F.L.
AU - Stroncik, Nicole A.
AU - Aljahdali, Mohammed
AU - Boudon, Georges
AU - Fujinawa, Akihiko
AU - Hatfield, Robert
AU - Kataoka, Kyoko
AU - Maeno, Fukashi
AU - Martinez-Colon, Michael
AU - McCanta, Molly
AU - Palmer, Martin
AU - Stinton, Adam
AU - Subramanyam, K. S.V.
AU - Tamura, Yoshihiko
AU - Villemant, Benoît
AU - Wall-Palmer, Deborah
AU - Wang, Fei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
©2015. The Authors.
PY - 2015/12/1
Y1 - 2015/12/1
N2 - Recent studies hypothesize that some submarine slides fail via pressure-driven slow-slip deformation. To test this hypothesis, this study derives pore pressures in failed and adjacent unfailed deep marine sediments by integrating rock physics models, physical property measurements on recovered sediment core, and wireline logs. Two drill sites (U1394 and U1399) drilled through interpreted slide debris; a third (U1395) drilled into normal marine sediment. Near-hydrostatic fluid pressure exists in sediments at site U1395. In contrast, results at both sites U1394 and U1399 indicate elevated pore fluid pressures in some sediment. We suggest that high pore pressure at the base of a submarine slide deposit at site U1394 results from slide shearing. High pore pressure exists throughout much of site U1399, and Mohr circle analysis suggests that only slight changes in the stress regime will trigger motion. Consolidation tests and permeability measurements indicate moderately low (~10-16-10-17 m2) permeability and overconsolidation in fine-grained slide debris, implying that these sediments act as seals. Three mechanisms, in isolation or in combination, may produce the observed elevated pore fluid pressures at site U1399: (1) rapid sedimentation, (2) lateral fluid flow, and (3) shearing that causes sediments to contract, increasing pore pressure. Our preferred hypothesis is this third mechanism because it explains both elevated fluid pressure and sediment overconsolidation without requiring high sedimentation rates. Our combined analysis of subsurface pore pressures, drilling data, and regional seismic images indicates that slope failure offshore Martinique is perhaps an ongoing, creep-like process where small stress changes trigger motion.
AB - Recent studies hypothesize that some submarine slides fail via pressure-driven slow-slip deformation. To test this hypothesis, this study derives pore pressures in failed and adjacent unfailed deep marine sediments by integrating rock physics models, physical property measurements on recovered sediment core, and wireline logs. Two drill sites (U1394 and U1399) drilled through interpreted slide debris; a third (U1395) drilled into normal marine sediment. Near-hydrostatic fluid pressure exists in sediments at site U1395. In contrast, results at both sites U1394 and U1399 indicate elevated pore fluid pressures in some sediment. We suggest that high pore pressure at the base of a submarine slide deposit at site U1394 results from slide shearing. High pore pressure exists throughout much of site U1399, and Mohr circle analysis suggests that only slight changes in the stress regime will trigger motion. Consolidation tests and permeability measurements indicate moderately low (~10-16-10-17 m2) permeability and overconsolidation in fine-grained slide debris, implying that these sediments act as seals. Three mechanisms, in isolation or in combination, may produce the observed elevated pore fluid pressures at site U1399: (1) rapid sedimentation, (2) lateral fluid flow, and (3) shearing that causes sediments to contract, increasing pore pressure. Our preferred hypothesis is this third mechanism because it explains both elevated fluid pressure and sediment overconsolidation without requiring high sedimentation rates. Our combined analysis of subsurface pore pressures, drilling data, and regional seismic images indicates that slope failure offshore Martinique is perhaps an ongoing, creep-like process where small stress changes trigger motion.
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U2 - 10.1002/2015JB012061
DO - 10.1002/2015JB012061
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84957843143
SN - 2169-9313
VL - 120
SP - 7986
EP - 8011
JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
IS - 12
ER -