Mylonite, cataclasite, and gouge: Reconstruction of mechanical heterogeneity along a low-angle normal fault: Death valley, USA

被引:1
|
作者
Lutz, B. M. [1 ,2 ]
Axen, G. J. [2 ]
机构
[1] US Geol Survey, Geosci & Environm Change Sci Ctr, Denver, CO 80225 USA
[2] New Mexico Inst Min & Technol, Earth & Environm Sci Dept, Socorro, NM 80501 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Low -angle normal fault; Fault mechanics; Coseismic slip; Fault friction; Mylonite; Cataclasite; Illite gouge; METAMORPHIC CORE COMPLEX; LAST CHANCE THRUST; RIO-GRANDE RIFT; FUNERAL-MOUNTAINS; DETACHMENT FAULT; SEISMIC SLIP; SHEAR-ZONES; FRICTIONAL-PROPERTIES; STRUCTURAL EVOLUTION; CENTRAL APENNINES;
D O I
10.1016/j.jsg.2024.105132
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The spectrum of slip behavior in crustal faults generates various rock types that can inform the mechanics of earthquake genesis. However, a single fault exposure may contain evidence of slip at various depths and temperatures due to progressive fault rock formation and overprinting during exhumation. Here, we unravel the spatiotemporal evolution of mechanical transitions along the Boundary Canyon detachment, a low -angle normal fault northeast of Death Valley, USA. Field, microstructural, and geochemical characterizations of fault rocks are compared to existing laboratory experiments and combined with a thermo-kinematic model of fault evolution. Together, these constrain the depths of mechanical transitions along the fault and reveal the evolution of earthquake nucleation zone thickness. Fault exposures from different initial paleodepths passed through the mechanical transitions during footwall exhumation, resulting in overprinting of mylonite by cataclasite and ubiquitous late formation of foliated, illite-rich gouge within the uppermost crust. We present evidence of coseismic low -angle normal fault slip (e.g., injection veins of cataclasite, laminar and grain -inertial fluidization). Coseismic slip likely nucleated at strength contrasts within the fault zone (i.e., contacts between quartzite breccia and calc-mylonite; quartz ribbons and mylonite matrix; breccia and clay gouge) at approximate to 5 - 9.5 km depth. Observations including mutually overprinting cataclasite/ultramylonite and exposures of pulverized gouge support that dynamic rupture propagated down -dip through the brittle -ductile transition zone ( approximate to 10 - 11 km depth) and up -dip through velocity -strengthening fault patches ( approximate to 0 - 5 km depth). Rapid fault exhumation increased the geotherm, leading to upward advection of the brittle -ductile transition and shallowing/thinning of the earthquake nucleation zone. This process may explain the rarity of large magnitude earthquakes on low -angle normal faults.
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页数:24
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