In the absence of drilling, surface-based geophysical methods are necessary to observe fault zones and fault zone physical properties at seismogenic depths. These in situ physical properties can then be used to infer the presence and distribution of fluids along faults, although such observations are by nature indirect and become less exact with greater depth. Multiple observations of a range of such geophysical properties as compressional and shear seismic velocity (Vp and Vs ), Vp/V s ratio (related to Poisson's ratio), resistivity and attenuation in and adjacent to fault zones offer the greatest hope of making inferences of the fault zone geometry, fluids in the fault zone, and fluid reservoirs in the surrounding crust. For simple geometries, fault zone guided waves can provide information on fault zone width and velocities for faults of the order of 200 m wide. To address the question of whether a narrow fault zone can be imaged well enough at depths of seismic rupture to infer the presence of anomalously high fluid/rock ratios, we present synthetic seismic tomography and magnetotelluric examples for an ideal case of a narrow fault zone with a simple geometry, large changes in material properties, and numerous earthquakes within the fault zone. A synthetic 0.5-km wide fault zone with 20% velocity reduction is well imaged using local earthquake tomo•aphy. When sequential velocity inversions are done, the true fault width is found, even to 9 km depth, although the calculated amplitude of the velocity reduction is lower than the actual amplitude. Vp/Vs is as well determined as Vp. Magnetotelluric imaging of a synthetic fault zone shows that a conductive fault zone can be well imaged within the upper 10 km. Further, a narrow (1 km) very low resistivity (3 ohm m) fault core can be imaged within a broad (5 kin) low resistivity (10 ohm m) fault zone, illustrating that regions of a fault containing large quantities of interconnected fluids within a broader, conductive fault zone should be detectable. Thus variations in fluid content and fluid pressure can be inferred from electrical and seismic methods but there will always be uncertainty in these inferences due to the trade-off with other factors, such as intrinsic variations in porosity, mineralogy, and pore geometry. The best approach is combined modeling of varied seismic and electrical data. 1988]. Within the fault zone however, slip may be localized ion leave from U.S. Geological Survey, Paper number 94JB03256. 0148-0227/95/94JB.03256505.00 within fault cores less than tens of centimeters thick [Chester et al., 1993]. The fluid will generally be water or brine, although in the deep crust CO2-rich fluids may exist under certain conditions [Fyfe et al., 1978]. The combination of fractures, breccia, clay, and cataclasites in the fault zone and the potential presence of fluids at high pore pressures should produce large contrasts in observable geophysical properties. However, the narrow width of the anomalous zone makes sensing with surface geophysical methods diff...
The tectonic setting of the southern Washington Cascades has been studied with the aid of magnetotelluric (MT) and other geophysical data. The main feature of interest in the geophysical data is a broad high-conductivity anomaly mapped with MT and geomagnetic variation (GMV) data. This anomaly is located roughly within the triangle formed by the volcanoes Mount Rainier, Mount St. Helens, and Mount Adams but exceeds beyond Mount Rainier to the northwest. We interpret the cause of the anomaly to be conductive rocks with resistivities of 1-4 ohm m and thicknesses possibly greater than 15 km. These conductive rocks are found 2-8 km beneath the overlying less conductive volcanic and sedimentary rocks at the surface. Two aeromagnetic lows follow the trend of the conductivity anomaly, and linear belts of strike-slip seismicity are coincident with both these magnetic lows. One of the aeromagnetic lows is coincident with the western margin of the conductivity anomaly. The geophysical data appear to outline a suture zone of probable Eocene age caused by accretion of a large seamount complex (Siletzia) and that may contain large thicknesses of compressed forearc basin and accretionary prism sedimentary rocks of Cretaceous to Eocene age. Part of the shallower conductive rocks may be associated with carbonaceous continental and transitional marine sedimentary rocks of the Puget Group. The contact between the hypothesized compressed basin and the accreted terranes to the west may localize the release of shear stresses in this region of oblique subduction. Several possible explanations for the conductivity anomaly are considered in addition to the compressed basin hypothesis.
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