Frictional melt pulses during a V1.1 Ma earthquake along the Alpine Fault, New Zealand
نویسنده
چکیده
Our understanding of frictional melting that occurs during large earthquake slip events has been hampered by the extremely fine-grain size of frictionally fused rock, and the lack of detailed high-resolution microscopy studies that describe features at the crystal lattice scale. In such a study, we here report the complex nature of melting and crystallization in a symmetrically layered, pseudotachylyte vein from the Alpine Fault, New Zealand. Two melt pulses are recognized, attributed to successive, but rapid, injections of frictionally generated material. The initial injection, preserved at the vein margins, was proximally derived and contains a high concentration of clasts and a Si-rich glass. This was quickly followed by a second generation of a more distally derived, melt-dominated fraction, which was injected into the weak vein center. Whereas fragments of wall-rock biotite are preserved in the marginal zones, neocrystallized microlitic biotite characterizes both margins and center. The vein biotite is different in composition, microstructure and polytypism from the metamorphic biotite of the wall rock. In all melt layers, newly formed biotite shows notable signs of syn-flow crystallization, strain features and erosion at crystal^glass contacts, with breakdown of neocrystallized microlites along both crystal edges and faces. These characteristics imply cyclic pulses of heating, melting and crystallization occurred during a single, large earthquake episode, and probably reflects the stick-slip propagation properties of coseismic faulting. 40Ar/39Ar total gas ages from the vein center give a 1.11; 0.04 Ma date for cyclic melting which, based on current exhumation rates, occurred at a crustal of depth V11 km. < 2003 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
منابع مشابه
Large‐displacement, hydrothermal frictional properties of DFDP‐1 fault rocks, Alpine Fault, New Zealand: Implications for deep rupture propagation
The Alpine Fault, New Zealand, is a major plate-bounding fault that accommodates 65-75% of the total relative motion between the Australian and Pacific plates. Here we present data on the hydrothermal frictional properties of Alpine Fault rocks that surround the principal slip zones (PSZ) of the Alpine Fault and those comprising the PSZ itself. The samples were retrieved from relatively shallow...
متن کاملPhysical properties of surface outcrop cataclastic fault rocks, Alpine Fault, New Zealand
[1] We present a unified analysis of physical properties of cataclastic fault rocks collected from surface exposures of the central Alpine Fault at Gaunt Creek and Waikukupa River, New Zealand. Friction experiments on fault gouge and intact samples of cataclasite were conducted at 30–33 MPa effective normal stress (sn′) using a double-direct shear configuration and controlled pore fluid pressur...
متن کاملGravity and Geological Studies of an Ultramafic Mass rn New Zealand!
A gravity and geologic survey was carried out over a port ion of the Nelson ultramafic belt of the South Island . In this region, the ultramafic rocks outcrop over a 5-mile-wide belt and abut against the Alpine greywacke along the right lateral transcurrent Alpine Fault. The dunite and peridotite of the ultram afic belt as well as the overlying geosynclinal sediments strike north . At their sou...
متن کاملFault rheology beyond frictional melting.
During earthquakes, comminution and frictional heating both contribute to the dissipation of stored energy. With sufficient dissipative heating, melting processes can ensue, yielding the production of frictional melts or "pseudotachylytes." It is commonly assumed that the Newtonian viscosities of such melts control subsequent fault slip resistance. Rock melts, however, are viscoelastic bodies, ...
متن کاملFrictional properties of incoming pelagic sediments at the Japan Trench: implications for large slip at a shallow plate boundary during the 2011 Tohoku earthquake
The 2011 Tohoku earthquake (Mw 9.0) produced a very large slip on the shallow part of a megathrust fault that resulted in destructive tsunamis. Although multiple causes of such large slip at shallow depths are to be expected, the frictional property of sediments around the fault, particularly at coseismic slip velocities, may significantly contribute to large slip along such faults. We have thu...
متن کامل