Title of article :
Microstructures and rheology of a calcite-shale thrust fault
Author/Authors :
Wells، نويسنده , , Rachel K. and Newman، نويسنده , , Julie and Wojtal، نويسنده , , Steven، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages :
13
From page :
69
To page :
81
Abstract :
A thin (∼2 cm) layer of extensively sheared fault rock decorates the ∼15 km displacement Copper Creek thrust at an exposure near Knoxville, TN (USA). In these ultrafine-grained (<0.3 μm) fault rocks, interpenetrating calcite grains form an interconnected network around shale clasts. One cm below the fault rock layer, sedimentary laminations in non-penetratively deformed footwall shale are cut by calcite veins, small faults, and stylolites. A 350 μm thick calcite vein separates the fault rocks and footwall shale. The vein is composed of layers of (1) coarse calcite grains (>5 μm) that exhibit a lattice preferred orientation (LPO) with pores at twin–twin and twin-grain boundary intersections, and (2) ultrafine-grained (0.3 μm) calcite that exhibits interpenetrating grain boundaries, four-grain junctions and lacks a LPO. Coarse calcite layers crosscut ultrafine-grained layers indicating intermittent vein formation during shearing. e in the fault rock layer is derived from vein calcite and grain-size reduction of calcite took place by plasticity-induced fracture. The ultrafine-grained calcite deformed primarily by diffusion-accommodated grain boundary sliding and formed an interconnected network around shale clasts within the shear zone. The interconnected network of ultrafine-grained calcite indicates that calcite, not shale, was the weak phase in this fault zone.
Keywords :
calcite , Shale , Low-temperature deformation , diffusion creep , grain boundary sliding , Plasticity-induced fracturing
Journal title :
Journal of Structural Geology
Serial Year :
2014
Journal title :
Journal of Structural Geology
Record number :
2228230
Link To Document :
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