4.7 Article

High magnetic susceptibility produced by thermal decomposition of core samples from the Chelungpu fault in Taiwan

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 272, Issue 1-2, Pages 372-381

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2008.05.002

Keywords

Chi-Chi earthquake; magnetic susceptibility; frictional heating; thermal decomposition

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We carried out thermomagnetic susceptibility analyses of fault rocks from core samples from Hole B of the Taiwan Chelungpu Fault Drilling Project (TCDP) to investigate the cause of high magnetic susceptibilities in the fault core. Test samples were thermally and mechanically treated by heating to different maximum temperatures of up to 900 degrees C and by high-velocity frictional tests before magnetic analyses. Thermomagnetic susceptibility analyses of natural fault rocks revealed that magnetization increased at maximum heating temperatures above 400 degrees C in the heating cycle, and showed three step increases, at 600 to 550 degrees C and at 300 degrees C during the cooling cycle. These behaviors are consistent with the presence of pyrite, siderite and chlorite, suggesting that TCDP gouge originally included these minerals, which contributed to the generation the magnetic susceptibility by thermomechanical reactions. The change in magnetic Susceptibility due to heating of siderite was 20 times that obtained by heating pyrite and chlorite, so that only a small fraction of siderite decomposition is enough to cause the slight increase of the susceptibility observed in the fault core. Color measurement results indicate that thermal decomposition by frictional heating took place under low-oxygen conditions at depth, which prevented the minerals from oxidizing to reddish hematite. This finding supports the inference that a mechanically driven chemical reaction partly accounts for the high magnetic susceptibility. A kinetic model analysis confirmed that frictional heating can cause thermal decomposition of siderite and pyrite. Our results show that decomposition of pyrite to pyrrhotite, siderite and, to some extent, chlorite to magnetite is the probable mechanism explaining the magnetic anomaly within the Chelungpu fault zone. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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