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Title: Seasonal slow slip in landslides as a window into the frictional rheology of creeping shear zones
Whether Earth materials exhibit frictional creep or catastrophic failure is a crucial but unresolved problem in predicting landslide and earthquake hazards. Here, we show that field-scale observations of sliding velocity and pore water pressure at two creeping landslides are explained by velocity-strengthening friction, in close agreement with laboratory measurements on similar materials. This suggests that the rate-strengthening friction commonly measured in clay-rich materials may govern episodic slow slip in landslides, in addition to tectonic faults. Further, our results show more generally that transient slow slip can arise in velocity-strengthening materials from modulation of effective normal stress through pore pressure fluctuations. This challenges the idea that episodic slow slip requires a narrow range of transitional frictional properties near the stability threshold, or pore pressure feedbacks operating on initially unstable frictional slip.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
2222149
PAR ID:
10637788
Author(s) / Creator(s):
;
Publisher / Repository:
AAAS
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Science Advances
Volume:
10
Issue:
42
ISSN:
2375-2548
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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