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Journal ArticleDOI

Earthquakes and friction laws

Christopher H. Scholz
- 01 Jan 1998 - 
- Vol. 391, Iss: 6662, pp 37-42
TLDR
The traditional view of tectonics is that the lithosphere comprises a strong brittle layer overlying a weak ductile layer, which gives rise to two forms of deformation: brittle fracture, accompanied by earth-quakes, in the upper layer, and aseismic ductile flow in the layer beneath as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
The traditional view of tectonics is that the lithosphere comprises a strong brittle layer overlying a weak ductile layer, which gives rise to two forms of deformation: brittle fracture, accompanied by earth- quakes, in the upper layer, and aseismic ductile flow in the layer beneath Although this view is not incorrect, it is imprecise, and in ways that can lead to serious misunderstandings The term ductility, for example, can apply equally to two common rock deformation mechanisms: crystal plasticity, which occurs in rock above a critical temperature, and cataclastic flow, a type of granular deformation which can occur in poorly consolidated sediments Although both exhibit ductility, these two deformation mechanisms have very different rheologies Earthquakes, in turn, are associated with strength and brittleness—associations that are likewise sufficiently imprecise that, if taken much beyond the generality implied in the opening sentence, they can lead to serious misinterpretations about earthquake mechanics Lately, a newer, much more precise and predictive model for the earthquake mechanism has emerged, which has its roots in the observation that tectonic earthquakes seldom if ever occur by the sudden appearance and propagation of a new shear crack (or 'fault') Instead, they occur by sudden slippage along a pre-existing fault or plate interface They are therefore a frictional, rather than fracture, phenomenon, with brittle fracture playing a secondary role in the lengthening of faults 1 and frictional wear 2 This distinction was noted by several early workers 3 , but it was not until 1966 that Brace and Byerlee 4 pointed out that earthquakes must be the result of a stick-slip frictional instability Thus, the earthquake is the 'slip', and the 'stick' is the interseismic period of elastic strain accumula- tion Subsequently, a complete constitutive law for rock friction has been developed based on laboratory studies A surprising result is that a great many other aspects of earthquake phenomena also now seem to result from the nature of the friction on faults The properties traditionally thought to control these processes— strength, brittleness and ductility—are subsumed within the over- arching concept of frictional stability regimes Constitutive law of rock friction In the standard model of stick-slip friction it is assumed that sliding begins when the ratio of shear to normal stress on the surface reaches a value ms, the static friction coefficient Once sliding initiates, frictional resistance falls to a lower dynamic friction coefficient, md, and this weakening of sliding resistance may,

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Journal ArticleDOI

A review of recent developments concerning the structure, mechanics and fluid flow properties of fault zones

TL;DR: Fault zones and fault systems have a key role in the development of the Earth's crust and control the mechanics and fluid flow properties of the crust, and the architecture of sedimentary deposits in basins as discussed by the authors.
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Introduction to Special Section: Stress Triggers, Stress Shadows, and Implications for Seismic Hazard

TL;DR: This paper reviewed many published works and presented a compilation of quantitative earthquake interaction studies from a stress change perspective, which provided some clues about certain aspects of earthquake mechanics, but much work remains before we can understand the complete story of how earthquakes work.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fault lubrication during earthquakes

TL;DR: It seems that faults are lubricated during earthquakes, irrespective of the fault rock composition and of the specific weakening mechanism involved, according to a large set of published and unpublished experiments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Earthquake triggering by static, dynamic, and postseismic stress transfer

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used static Coulomb stress changes associated with earthquake slip to explain aftershock distributions, earthquake sequences, and the quiescence of broad, normally active regions following large earthquakes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seismicity triggered by fluid injection–induced aseismic slip

TL;DR: Real-time observations of a reactivated fault provide an option for monitoring of earthquake-inducing wastewater injection and can inform models of how friction is related to slip rate, as well as measure fault slip and seismicity induced by fluid injection into a natural fault.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Self-organized criticality

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that certain extended dissipative dynamical systems naturally evolve into a critical state, with no characteristic time or length scales, and the temporal fingerprint of the self-organized critical state is the presence of flicker noise or 1/f noise; its spatial signature is the emergence of scale-invariant (fractal) structure.
Book

The Mechanics of Earthquakes and Faulting

TL;DR: The connection between faults and the seismicity generated is governed by the rate and state dependent friction laws -producing distinctive seismic styles of faulting and a gamut of earthquake phenomena including aftershocks, afterslip, earthquake triggering, and slow slip events.
Journal ArticleDOI

Friction of Rocks

TL;DR: This paper showed that at low normal stress the shear stress required to slide one rock over another varies widely between experiments and at high normal stress that effect is diminished and the friction is nearly independent of rock type.
Journal ArticleDOI

Slip instability and state variable friction laws

TL;DR: In this paper, the dependence of the friction force on slip history is described by an experimentally motivated constitutive law where the friction forces are dependent on slip rate and state variables.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling of rock friction: 1. Experimental results and constitutive equations

TL;DR: In this paper, it is shown that the strength of the population of points of contacts between sliding surfaces determines frictional strength and that the number of contacts changes continuously with displacements.