Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Mari Hamahashi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Mari Hamahashi.


Earth, Planets and Space | 2014

Changes in illite crystallinity within an ancient tectonic boundary thrust caused by thermal, mechanical, and hydrothermal effects: an example from the Nobeoka Thrust, southwest Japan

Rina Fukuchi; Koichiro Fujimoto; Jun Kameda; Mari Hamahashi; Asuka Yamaguchi; Gaku Kimura; Yohei Hamada; Yoshitaka Hashimoto; Yujin Kitamura; Saneatsu Saito

Illite crystallinity (IC), the full width at half maximum of the illite (001) peak in clay-fraction X-ray diffraction (XRD), is a common geothermometer widely applied to various tectonic settings. Paleotemperature estimation using IC presents methodological ambiguity because IC is not only affected by background temperature but also by mechanical, hydrothermal, and surface weathering effects. To clarify the influences of these effects on IC in the fault zone, we analyzed the IC and the illite 001 peak intensity of continuous borehole core samples from the Nobeoka Thrust, a fossilized tectonic boundary thrust in the Shimanto Belt, the Cretaceous-Paleogene Shimanto accretionary complex in southwest Japan. We also carried out grinding experiments on borehole core samples and sericite standard samples as starting materials and investigated the effect of mechanical comminution on the IC and illite peak intensity of the experimental products. We observed the following: (1) the paleotemperatures of the hanging wall and footwall of the Nobeoka Thrust are estimated to be 288°C to 299°C and 198°C to 249°C, respectively, which are approximately 20°C to 30°C lower than their previously reported temperatures estimated by vitrinite reflectance; (2) the fault core of the Nobeoka Thrust does not exhibit IC decrease; (3) the correlation of IC and illite peak intensity in the hanging wall damage zone were well reproduced by the grinding experiment, suggesting that the effect of mechanical comminution increases toward the fault core and; (4) the abrupt increase in IC value accompanied by high illite peak intensity is explained by hydrothermal alterations including plagioclase breakdown and the formation of white micas. Our results indicate that IC has potential for quantifying the effects of mechanical comminution and hydrothermal alteration within a fault zone.


Science | 2017

Release of mineral-bound water prior to subduction tied to shallow seismogenic slip off Sumatra

Andre Hüpers; Marta E. Torres; Satoko Owari; Lisa C. McNeill; Brandon Dugan; Timothy J. Henstock; Kitty L. Milliken; Katerina Petronotis; Jan Backman; Sylvain Bourlange; Farid Chemale; Wenhuang Chen; Tobias A. Colson; Marina C.G. Frederik; Gilles Guerin; Mari Hamahashi; Brian M. House; Tamara N. Jeppson; Sarah Kachovich; Abby R. Kenigsberg; Mebae Kuranaga; Steffen Kutterolf; Freya L. Mitchison; Hideki Mukoyoshi; Nisha Nair; Kevin T. Pickering; Hugo Pouderoux; Yehua Shan; Insun Song; Paola Vannucchi

Sediments tell a tsunami story Trying to understand where major earthquakes and tsunamis might occur requires analysis of the sediments pouring into a subduction zone. Thick sediments were expected to limit earthquake and tsunami size in the Sumatran megathrust event in 2004, but the magnitude 9.2 earthquake defied expectations. Hüpers et al. analyzed sediments recovered from the Sumatran megathrust. They found evidence of sediment dehydration, which increased fault strength and allowed for the much larger earthquake to occur. Thus, models of other subduction zones, such as the Gulf of Alaska, may underestimate the maximum earthquake magnitude and tsunami risk. Science, this issue p. 841 Sediments drilled near the rupture of the 2004 great Sumatran earthquake provide insight into the unexpectedly large tsunami. Plate-boundary fault rupture during the 2004 Sumatra-Andaman subduction earthquake extended closer to the trench than expected, increasing earthquake and tsunami size. International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 362 sampled incoming sediments offshore northern Sumatra, revealing recent release of fresh water within the deep sediments. Thermal modeling links this freshening to amorphous silica dehydration driven by rapid burial-induced temperature increases in the past 9 million years. Complete dehydration of silicates is expected before plate subduction, contrasting with prevailing models for subduction seismogenesis calling for fluid production during subduction. Shallow slip offshore Sumatra appears driven by diagenetic strengthening of deeply buried fault-forming sediments, contrasting with weakening proposed for the shallow Tohoku-Oki 2011 rupture, but our results are applicable to other thickly sedimented subduction zones including those with limited earthquake records.


Earth, Planets and Space | 2014

Friction properties of the plate boundary megathrust beneath the frontal wedge near the Japan Trench: an inference from topographic variation

Hiroaki Koge; Toshiya Fujiwara; Shuichi Kodaira; Tomoyuki Sasaki; Jun Kameda; Yujin Kitamura; Mari Hamahashi; Rina Fukuchi; Asuka Yamaguchi; Yohei Hamada; Juichiro Ashi; Gaku Kimura

The 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake (Mw 9.0) produced a fault rupture that extended to the toe of the Japan Trench. The deformation and frictional properties beneath the forearc are keys that can help to elucidate this unusual event. In the present study, to investigate the frictional properties of the shallow part of the plate boundary, we applied the critically tapered Coulomb wedge theory to the Japan Trench and obtained the effective coefficient of basal friction μb′ and Hubbert-Rubey pore fluid pressure ratio (λ) of the wedge beneath the lower slope. We extracted the surface slope angle and décollement dip angle (which are the necessary topographic parameters for applying the critical taper theory) from seismic reflection and refraction survey data at 12 sites in the frontal wedges of the Japan Trench. We found that the angle between the décollement and back-stop interface generally decreases toward the north. The measured taper angle and inferred effective friction coefficient were remarkably high at three locations. The southernmost area, which had the highest coefficient of basal friction, coincides with the area where the seamount is colliding offshore of Fukushima. The second area with a high effective coefficient of basal friction coincides with the maximum slip location during the 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake. The area of the 2011 earthquake rupture was topographically unique from other forearc regions in the Japan Trench. The strain energy accumulation near the trench axis may have proceeded because of the relatively high friction, and later this caused a large slip and collapse of the wedge. The location off Sanriku, where there are neither seamount collisions nor rupture propagation, also has a high coefficient of basal friction. The characteristics of the taper angle, effective coefficient of basal friction, and pore fluid pressure ratio along the Japan Trench presented herein may contribute to the understanding of the relationship between the geometry of the prism and the potential for generating seismo-tsunamigenic slips.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2017

Normal faulting and mass movement during ridge subduction inferred from porosity transition and zeolitization in the Costa Rica subduction zone

Mari Hamahashi; Elizabeth J. Screaton; Wataru Tanikawa; Yoshitaka Hashimoto; Kylara Martin; Saneatsu Saito; Gaku Kimura

Subduction of the buoyant Cocos Ridge offshore the Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica substantially affects the upper plate structure through a variety of processes, including outer forearc uplift, erosion, and focused fluid flow. To investigate the nature of a major seismic reflector (MSR) developed between slope sediments (late Pliocene-late Pleistocene silty clay) and underlying higher velocity upper plate materials (late Pliocene-early Pleistocene clayey siltstone), we infer possible mechanisms of sediment removal by examining the consolidation state, microstructure, and zeolite assemblages of sediments recovered from Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 344 Site U1380. Formation of Ca-type zeolites, laumontite and heulandite, inferred to form in the presence of Ca-rich fluids, has caused porosity reduction. We adjust measured porosity values for these pore-filling zeolites and evaluated the new porosity profile to estimate how much material was removed at the MSR. Based on the composite porosity-depth curve, we infer the past burial depth of the sediments directly below the MSR. The corrected and uncorrected porosity-depth curves yield values of 800 ± 70 m and 900 ± 70 m, respectively. We argue that deposition and removal of this entire estimated thickness in 0.49 Ma would require unrealistically large sedimentation rates and suggest that normal faulting at the MSR must contribute. The porosity offset could be explained with maximum 250 ± 70 m of normal fault throw, or 350 ± 70 m if the porosity were not corrected. The porosity correction significantly reduces the amount of sediment removal needed for the combination of mass movement and normal faulting that characterize the slope in this margin.


Tectonophysics | 2012

Tectonic mélange as fault rock of subduction plate boundary

Gaku Kimura; Asuka Yamaguchi; M. Hojo; Yujin Kitamura; Jun Kameda; Kohtaro Ujiie; Yohei Hamada; Mari Hamahashi; Shoko Hina


Journal of Structural Geology | 2013

Hanging wall deformation of a seismogenic megasplay fault in an accretionary prism: The Nobeoka Thrust in southwestern Japan

Gaku Kimura; Mari Hamahashi; Shin'ya Okamoto; Asuka Yamaguchi; Jun Kameda; Hugues Raimbourg; Yohei Hamada; Haruka Yamaguchi; Tadahiro Shibata


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2012

Silica diagenesis and its effect on interplate seismicity in cold subduction zones

Jun Kameda; Shoko Hina; Kyoko Kobayashi; Asuka Yamaguchi; Yohei Hamada; Yuzuru Yamamoto; Mari Hamahashi; Gaku Kimura


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2013

Contrasts in physical properties between the hanging wall and footwall of an exhumed seismogenic megasplay fault in a subduction zone—An example from the Nobeoka Thrust Drilling Project

Mari Hamahashi; Saneatsu Saito; Gaku Kimura; Asuka Yamaguchi; Rina Fukuchi; Jun Kameda; Yohei Hamada; Yujin Kitamura; Koichiro Fujimoto; Yoshitaka Hashimoto; Shoko Hina; Mio Eida


Earth, Planets and Space | 2015

Multiple damage zone structure of an exhumed seismogenic megasplay fault in a subduction zone - a study from the Nobeoka Thrust Drilling Project

Mari Hamahashi; Yohei Hamada; Asuka Yamaguchi; Gaku Kimura; Rina Fukuchi; Saneatsu Saito; Jun Kameda; Yujin Kitamura; Koichiro Fujimoto; Yoshitaka Hashimoto


Island Arc | 2012

Unconformity between a Late Miocene–Pliocene accretionary prism (Nishizaki Formation) and Pliocene trench‐slope sediments (Kagamigaura Formation), central Japan

Yuzuru Yamamoto; Shun Chiyonobu; Toshiyuki Kurihara; Asuka Yamaguchi; Shoko Hina; Mari Hamahashi; Hugues Raimbourg; Romain Augier; Leslie Gadenne

Collaboration


Dive into the Mari Hamahashi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yohei Hamada

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rina Fukuchi

Tokyo Gakugei University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Saneatsu Saito

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge