Abstract

AbstractWe describe laboratory measurements of the permeability of fault rocks and their host protoliths obtained from the Median Tectonic Line (MTL), the largest strike-slip fault in Japan. The measurements are made using a gas-medium apparatus that simulates in situ conditions. Samples of fault gouge, cataclastic mylonite, and protoliths were collected from the Kitagawa and Ankoh outcrops of the MTL and adjacent areas in Ohshika-mura, Nagano Prefecture, central Japan. Permeabilities of these samples were measured at room temperature under dry conditions, with nitrogen as the pore fluid. Most samples from the incohesive fault zone have a permeability ranging between 10−13 and 10−17 m2 (100–0.01 mD). These permeabilities are greater than those of cemented cataclasites and mylonites by more than two orders of magnitude at all effective pressures (Pe) up to 180 MPa. Clayey fault gouge material has a permeability as low as 10−19 m2 (0.1 µD) at high effective pressures, but such impermeable fault gouge does not constitute a continuous zone on the two outcrops we studied. Permeability of the incohesive fault rocks exhibits large hysteresis upon Pe cycling, compared with cataclasite and mylonite, because those cemented, cohesive fault rocks undergo much less inelastic deformation during the pressure cycling.

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