Strain localization in pseudotachylyte veins at lower crustal conditions

Viscous shearing in the dry and strong lower crust often localizes in pseudotachylyte veins (i.e. quenched molten rocks formed by the frictional heat released during seismic slip), and it has been suggested that brittle (coseismic) grain-size reduction and fluid infiltration in the fractured domains...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Luca Menegon, Giorgio Pennacchioni, Nadia Malaspina
Other Authors: Menegon, Luca, Pennacchioni, Giorgio, Malaspina, Nadia
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11577/3258781
https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2017/EGU2017-7240.pdf
Description
Summary:Viscous shearing in the dry and strong lower crust often localizes in pseudotachylyte veins (i.e. quenched molten rocks formed by the frictional heat released during seismic slip), and it has been suggested that brittle (coseismic) grain-size reduction and fluid infiltration in the fractured domains are necessary to weaken the anhydrous granulitic lower crust. However, the deformation mechanisms responsible for the associated strain weakening and viscous shear localization in pseudotachylytes are yet to be explored. This study investigates the deformation microstructures of mylonitized pseudotachylytes in anorthosites from Nus- fjord, northern Norway, where ductile shear zones invariably nucleate in pseudotachylyte veins. Thus, pseudotachy- lytes are weaker than the host rock during superposed ductile deformation. Pristine pseudotachylytes contain microlites of plagioclase, clinopyroxene, amphibole and orthopyroxene, flow structures, and chilled margins. Some pseudotachylytes have lost the pristine microstructure and have recrystallized into a fine-grained ( < 10 μ m) mixture of plagioclase, amphibole, clinopyroxene, biotite, quartz ± K-feldspar ± orthopyroxene. Thus, the fine grain size in the mylonites ( < 20 μ m) is not the product of progressive grain-size reduction with increasing strain, but is an initial characteristic of the shear zone (pseudotachylyte) precursor. The stable mineral assemblage in the mylonitic foliation consists of plagioclase, hornblende, clinopyroxene ± quartz ± biotite ± orthoclase. Geothermobarometry and thermodynamic modelling indicate that pristine pseudotachylytes and their mylonitized equivalents formed at ca. 700 ̊C and 0.6-0.9 GPa. Diffusion creep and grain boundary sliding were identified as the main deformation mechanisms in the mylonite on the basis of the lack of crystallographic preferred orientations, the high degree of phase mixing, and the nucleation of hornblende in dilatant sites. In contrast with common observations that fluid infiltration is required to ...