“…To reveal the fault mechanics and explain fault slip activities at the Nankai Trough subduction zone system, the Nankai Trough Seismogenic Zone Experiment (NanTroSEIZE) project of the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program/International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) drilled over 10 sites to measure physical properties and to collect sediment samples below seafloor along the Kumano transect offshore Kii Peninsula, Japan (Figure 1). Because friction directly controls the slip behavior of a fault (Marone, 1998;Scholz, 2019), the frictional properties of recovered prism and input sediments have been studied through laboratory experiments (Ikari et al, 2009(Ikari et al, , 2013(Ikari et al, , 2018Ikari & Hüpers, 2019;Roesner et al, 2020;Takahashi et al, 2013Takahashi et al, , 2014Tsutsumi et al, 2011;Ujiie & Tsutsumi, 2010). Frictional properties are mostly controlled by lithological variations of sediments (Ikari et al, 2013(Ikari et al, , 2018; Tobin et al, 2019), showing the three drilling sites from which our samples in this study were retrieved.…”