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Release of mineral-bound water prior to subduction tied to shallow seismogenic slip off Sumatra.

Andre HüpersMarta E TorresSatoko OwariLisa C McNeillBrandon E DuganTimothy J HenstockKitty L MillikenKaterina E PetronotisJan BackmanSylvain M BourlangeFarid ChemaleWenhuang ChenTobias A ColsonMarina C G FrederikGilles GuèrinMari HamahashiBrian M HouseTamara N JeppsonSarah KachovichAbby R KenigsbergMebae KuranagaSteffen KutterolfFreya L MitchisonHideki MukoyoshiNisha NairKevin T PickeringHugo F A PouderouxYehua ShanInsun SongPaola VannucchiPeter J VrolijkTao YangXixi Zhao
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2018)
Plate-boundary fault rupture during the 2004 Sumatra-Andaman subduction earthquake extended closer to the trench than expected, increasing earthquake and tsunami size. International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 362 sampled incoming sediments offshore northern Sumatra, revealing recent release of fresh water within the deep sediments. Thermal modeling links this freshening to amorphous silica dehydration driven by rapid burial-induced temperature increases in the past 9 million years. Complete dehydration of silicates is expected before plate subduction, contrasting with prevailing models for subduction seismogenesis calling for fluid production during subduction. Shallow slip offshore Sumatra appears driven by diagenetic strengthening of deeply buried fault-forming sediments, contrasting with weakening proposed for the shallow Tohoku-Oki 2011 rupture, but our results are applicable to other thickly sedimented subduction zones including those with limited earthquake records.
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