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Thermal anomaly around the Nojima Fault as detected by fission-track analysis of Ogura 500 m borehole samples
Authors:Takahiro Tagami  Noriko Hasebe  Hidenori Kamohara  Keiji Takemura
Institution:Division of Earth Planetary Science, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan (email;) andDepartment of Earth Science, Faculty of Science, Kanazawa University, Kanazawa 920-1192, Japan
Abstract:Abstract To better understand heat generation and transfer along earthquake faults, this paper presents preliminary zircon fission-track (FT) length data from the Nojima Fault, Awaji Island, Japan, which was activated during the 1995 Kobe earthquake (Hyogo-ken Nanbu earthquake). Samples were collected of Cretaceous granitic rocks from the Ogura 500 m borehole as well as at outcrops adjacent to the borehole site. The Nojima Fault plane was drilled at a depth of 389.4 m (borehole apparent depth). Fission-track lengths in zircons from localities > 60 m distance from the fault plane, as well as those from outcrops, are characterized by the mean values of ≈10–11 μm and unimodal distributions with positive skewness, which show no signs of an appreciable reduction in FT length. In contrast, those from nearby the fault at depths show significantly reduced mean track lengths of ≈6–8 μm and distributions having a peak around 6–7 μm with rather negative skewness. In conjunction with other geological constraints, these results are best interpreted by a recent thermal anomaly around the fault, which is attributable to heat transfer via focused fluids from the deep interior of the crust and/or heat dispersion via fluids associated with frictional heating by fault motion.
Keywords:fission track  frictional heating  Kobe earthquake  Nojima Fault  thermal anomaly  thermochronology  zircon
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