Characterization of porosity in the sediments entering the Northern
Hikurangi Margin from Cation Exchange Capacity and IODP Expeditions 372
and 375 data : implications for compaction state, stress and fluid
pressure
Abstract
In subduction zones, megathrust seismicity depends on the
hydrogeological, physical and mechanical properties of sediments before
they enter the subduction zone and how these properties evolve through
the subduction process. In particular, fluids are progressively released
by compaction and/or mineral dehydration reactions as burial increases,
resulting in the build-up of pore fluid pressure in low-permeability
sediments that strongly affects fault behavior through its control on
effective normal stress. Thus, characterizing the compaction state and
bound water content of sediments in subduction systems is crucial.
During IODP Expedition 372 and 375, Site U1518 was drilled in the
frontal wedge of the Northern Hikurangi margin ~6.5 km
west of the deformation front. This site penetrated an active thrust
fault, the Papaku fault, its hanging wall and uppermost footwall. The
Papaku fault, intersected at ~304 meters below sea
floor, is a westward-dipping splay fault which is thought to lie in the
SSE rupture area, to host SSEs and to have accommodated several
kilometers of shortening within the prism. It is composed of a
~18m-thick main fault zone with a mixture of brittle and
ductile structures and ductile features locally overprinted by brittle
fractures and faults. Below, there are a ~21m-thick zone
of gradually decreasing brittle-ductile deformation and a
~10m-thick subsidiary fault zone. The folded, faulted
and pervasively fractured hanging wall corresponds to Early-Mid
Pleistocene hemipelagic silty-claystone with fine-grained turbidites
sequences. The footwall is composed by relatively undeformed Mid-Late
Pleistocene bioturbated hemipelagic mudstones with turbidites sequences.
We use IODP expeditions 372-375 and post-cruise porosity, logging and
chemical data to characterize the porosity of sediments at Site U1518,
including interstitial porosity, bound water content and fracture
porosity. Interstitial porosity is obtained by correcting total porosity
measured onboard accounting for clay-mineral bound water using Cation
Exchange Capacity (CEC). Unlike total porosity measured onboard,
interstitial porosity is representative of the compaction state of
sediments. To better characterize interstitial porosity, we document the
evolution of the structure of meso- to macropores with depth using
mercury injection capillary pressure and low-field nuclear magnetic
resonance. We assess the compaction state of sediments at Site U1518 by
comparing the interstitial porosity-effective vertical stress curve with
that of equivalent siliciclastic units at Site U1520. This site sampled
and logged the undeformed input sedimentary section and the top of the
oceanic crust ~95 km from shore. We show that the
hanging-wall of the Papaku thrust fault is overconsolidated whereas the
footwall is normally consolidated. Finally, we discuss deformation
history of sediments during accretion regarding the compaction profile
and the deformation structures observed at Site U1518.