STRUCTURE AND COMPOSITION OF THE SAN ANDREAS FAULT AT SEISMOGENIC DEPTHS: RECENT RESULTS FROM THE SAFOD EXPERIMENT
Borehole geophysical logs and drill cuttings analyses conducted during SAFOD Phases 1 and 2 reveal that the San Andreas Fault Zone consists of a relatively broad (~200 m) damage zone of anomalous geophysical properties, which contains several discrete zones with even more anomalous geophysical properties (and mineralogies) that may represent active shear zones. Two of these shear zones are now actively deforming the cemented casing. One of these zones is also associated with the sudden appearance of serpentine and talc, minerals thought to be important in controlling frictional strength and the stability of sliding.
The Phase 3 core samples will be extensively studied in the laboratory to compare and contrast the composition, deformation mechanisms, physical properties and rheological behavior of creeping and seismogenic fault rocks at realistic in-situ conditions. At the conclusion of Phase 3, an array of seismometers, accelerometers, tiltmeters and fluid pressure sensors will be deployed in the cased borehole in the immediate vicinity of repeating M2 earthquakes. Acting in concert with studies on recovered samples, SAFOD long-term monitoring will be used to test hypotheses related to earthquake rupture nucleation, propagation and arrest; the possible role of fluid pressure in controlling fault strength and earthquake periodicity; and the manner in which earthquake energy is partitioned among seismic radiation, frictional dissipation, grain-size reduction, and chemical reactions.