This study reports on laboratory-strength measurements of fault core materials from a drill hole located northwest of Parkfield, California, near the southern end of a creeping zone of the San Andreas fault. It is found that the fault is profoundly weak at this location and depth, owing to the presence of the smectite clay mineral saponite—one of the weakest phyllosilicates known. These findings provide strong evidence that deformation of the mechanically unusual creeping portions of the San Andreas fault system is controlled by the presence of weak minerals rather than by high fluid pressure or other proposed mechanisms.
- David A. Lockner
- Carolyn Morrow
- Stephen Hickman