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Nondestructive continuous physical property measurements of core samples recovered from hole B, Taiwan Chelungpu‐Fault Drilling Project
Author(s) -
Hirono Tetsuro,
Yeh EnChao,
Lin Weiren,
Sone Hiroki,
Mishima Toshiaki,
Soh Wonn,
Hashimoto Yoshitaka,
Matsubayashi Osamu,
Aoike Kan,
Ito Hisao,
Kinoshita Masataka,
Murayama Masafumi,
Song ShengRong,
Ma KuoFong,
Hung JihHao,
Wang ChienYing,
Tsai YiBen,
Kondo Tomomi,
Nishimura Masahiro,
Moriya Soichi,
Tanaka Tomoyuki,
Fujiki Toru,
Maeda Lena,
Muraki Hiroaki,
Kuramoto Toshikatsu,
Sugiyama Kazuhiro,
Sugawara Toshikatsu
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: solid earth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2006jb004738
Subject(s) - fault (geology) , geology , drilling , seismology , core (optical fiber) , magnetic susceptibility , fault gouge , petrology , materials science , metallurgy , composite material , physics , quantum mechanics
The Taiwan Chelungpu‐Fault Drilling Project was undertaken in 2002 to investigate the faulting mechanism of the 1999 M w 7.6 Taiwan Chi‐Chi earthquake. Hole B penetrated the Chelungpu fault, and core samples were recovered from between 948.42‐ and 1352.60‐m depth. Three major zones, designated FZB1136 (fault zone at 1136‐m depth in hole B), FZB1194, and FZB1243, were recognized in the core samples as active fault zones within the Chelungpu fault. Nondestructive continuous physical property measurements, conducted on all core samples, revealed that the three major fault zones were characterized by low gamma ray attenuation (GRA) densities and high magnetic susceptibilities. Extensive fracturing and cracks within the fault zones and/or loss of atoms with high atomic number, but not a measurement artifact, might have caused the low GRA densities, whereas the high magnetic susceptibility values might have resulted from the formation of magnetic minerals from paramagnetic minerals by frictional heating. Minor fault zones were characterized by low GRA densities and no change in magnetic susceptibility, and the latter may indicate that these minor zones experienced relatively low frictional heating. Magnetic susceptibility in a fault zone may be key to the determination that frictional heating occurred during an earthquake on the fault.

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