Olivine Instability: An Experimental View of Mechanism of Deep Earthquakes
Abstract
Olivine (¦Á-(Mg,Fe)2SiO4) is the major constituent of the upper mantle and the ocean lithosphere. In subduction zone, where the earthquakes happen, the rheology of slab is mainly controlled by that of olivine. Several different mechanisms for deep focus earthquakes have been suggested, which include olivine instability (Bridgman, 1936; Orowan, 1960; Post, 1977; Ogawa, 1987; Hobbs and Ord, 1988; Kao and Chen, 1995), shear-induced melting (Griggs, 1954, 1972; Griggs and Handin, 1960; Griggs and Baker, 1969), phase transformation (Bridgman, 1945; Benioff, 1963; Meade and Jeanloz, 1989), dehydration of hydrous specimens (Meade and Jeanloz, 1991), and olivine metastability-induced anticrack (Green and Houston, 1995). Since the low temperature of the ¡°cold¡± slab, which can be as low as 600¡ãC in transition zone, olivine may still exist there and thus its shear instability may still be the possible mechanism for the deep-focus earthquakes. In our experimental study on deformation of San Carlos olivine at subduction zone conditions carried out on a D-DIA apparatus, Sam85 at X17B2, NSLS, we observed that the transitional temperature between regimes of insensitive to temperature and sensitive to temperature can be as high as 900¡ãC or even higher for the annealed polycrystal olivine sample, while that for unannealed sample can be as low as 450¡ãC. Our results for the unannealed sample are consistent to the result of Raterron et al (2004), which is concluded from the relaxation experiments. The annealed and unannealed olivine can be present the natural olivine in non-fault systems and that in pre-existing fault systems in subduction zone, respectively. We therefore propose a new olivine instability model with a ¡°sandwich¡± formation for the deep focus earthquakes: In this model the pre-existing fault system is surrounded by the no-fault systems. When the slab dives down, the olivine in both systems undergoes a stress- build-up process and can hold very high stress in both cases. However, as it keeps diving to the transition zone, the slab is heated and its temperature arrives at the boundary temperature from the insensitive temperature regime to the sensitive to temperature regime for the olivine in pre-existing fault system. As a result, while the olivine in non-fault system is still in regime of insensitive to temperature and can still hold the built high stress, the olivine in pre-existing fault system can not hold the built stress any more and gives a stress release. The pre- existing fault is re-active and heat from the re-active fault accelerates the ongoing process. Earthquake happens.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2007
- Bibcode:
- 2007AGUFMMR43A0980L
- Keywords:
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- 3902 Creep and deformation;
- 3954 X-ray;
- neutron;
- and electron spectroscopy and diffraction;
- 5120 Plasticity;
- diffusion;
- and creep;
- 8033 Rheology: mantle (8162);
- 8163 Rheology and friction of fault zones (8034)