The Mw7.1 September 19th Puebla-Morelos (Mexico) earthquake triggered by brucite and antigorite dewatering

semanticscholar(2021)

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摘要

Subduction controls key geological processes at convergent margins including seismicity and resultant seismic hazard. The September 19th 2017 Mw7.1 Mexican earthquake nucleated ~250 km from the trench within the Cocos plate near its Moho, ~57 km below Earth’s surface. The prevailing hypothesis suggests that this earthquake resulted from bending stresses occurring at the flat-to-steep subduction transition. Here, we present an alternative, but not mutually exclusive, hypothesis: the dehydration reaction brucite + antigorite = olivine + H2O in the slab mantle controls intermediate-depth seismicity along the flat portion of the subducted Cocos plate. This reaction releases a substantial amount of H2O, resulting in a large positive volume change, and thus in an increase in pore fluid pressure at the appropriate depth–temperature conditions to cause the Puebla-Morelos and other intraslab earthquakes in Mexico. The amount of H2O released by this reaction depends on the degree of serpentinization of the oceanic mantle prior to subduction. Only oceanic mantle with > 60% serpentinization—as expected along abundant deep extensional faults at the mid-ocean-ridge or where the plate bends at the outer rise—will stabilize brucite, and thus, will experience this reaction at the same depths where the September 19th 2017 earthquake nucleated.

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