TY - JOUR
T1 - Oscillating brittle and viscous behavior through the earthquake cycle in the Red River Shear Zone
T2 - Monitoring flips between reaction and textural softening and hardening
AU - Wintsch, Robert P.
AU - Yeh, Meng Wan
N1 - Funding Information:
We are grateful to Tim Bell for his indefatigable enthusiasm and for his support of our work, and we are pleased to have been able to present an early version of this paper at a symposium in his honor. We have benefitted from discussions with Sun Lin Chung, G. Hirth, A. Kronenberg, and Tong Yi Lee. R. McAleer made constructive comments on earlier drafts of this manuscript. We are grateful for the very thorough and helpful reviews of an earlier draft of this paper by L. Brander, A. Kronenberg, and L. Lagoeiro. We thank C. Zhu for providing a copy of SUPCRT interfaced with the data base of Holland and Powell (1998) , and Yie Chen Liu, Yu Lin Chen for sample preparation and help in the field. This study was partially supported by NSF grant EAR-1019682 to Wintsch and by a National Science Council, Taiwan, R.O.C. grant to M-W. Yeh.
PY - 2013/3/5
Y1 - 2013/3/5
N2 - Microstructures associated with cataclasites and mylonites in the Red River shear zone in the Diancang Shan block, Yunnan Province, China show evidence for both reaction hardening and softening at lower greenschist facies metamorphic conditions. The earliest fault-rocks derived from Triassic porphyritic orthogneiss protoliths are cataclasites. Brittle fractures and crushed grains are cemented by newly precipitated quartz. These cataclasites are subsequently overprinted by mylonitic fabrics. Truncations and embayments of relic feldspars and biotites show that these protolith minerals have been dissolved and incompletely replaced by muscovite, chlorite, and quartz. Both K-feldspar and plagioclase porphyroclasts are truncated by muscovite alone, suggesting locally metasomatic reactions of the form: 3K-feldspar+2H+=muscovite+6SiO2(aq)+2K+. Such reactions produce muscovite folia and fish, and quartz bands and ribbons. Muscovite and quartz are much weaker than the reactant feldspars and these reactions result in reaction softening. Moreover, the muscovite tends to align in contiguous bands that constitute textural softening. These mineral and textural modifications occurred at constant temperature and drove the transition from brittle to viscous deformation and the shift in deformation mechanism from cataclasis to dissolution-precipitation and reaction creep. These mylonitic rocks so produced are cut by K-feldspar veins that interrupt the mylonitic fabric. The veins add K-feldspar to the assemblage and these structures constitute both reaction and textural hardening. Finally these veins are boudinaged by continued viscous deformation in the mylonitic matrix, thus defining a late ductile strain event. Together these overprinting textures and microstructures demonstrate several oscillations between brittle and viscous deformation, all at lower greenschist facies conditions where only frictional behavior is predicted by experiments. The overlap of the depths of greenschist facies conditions with the base of the crustal seismic zone suggests that the implied oscillations in strain rate may have been related to the earthquake cycle.
AB - Microstructures associated with cataclasites and mylonites in the Red River shear zone in the Diancang Shan block, Yunnan Province, China show evidence for both reaction hardening and softening at lower greenschist facies metamorphic conditions. The earliest fault-rocks derived from Triassic porphyritic orthogneiss protoliths are cataclasites. Brittle fractures and crushed grains are cemented by newly precipitated quartz. These cataclasites are subsequently overprinted by mylonitic fabrics. Truncations and embayments of relic feldspars and biotites show that these protolith minerals have been dissolved and incompletely replaced by muscovite, chlorite, and quartz. Both K-feldspar and plagioclase porphyroclasts are truncated by muscovite alone, suggesting locally metasomatic reactions of the form: 3K-feldspar+2H+=muscovite+6SiO2(aq)+2K+. Such reactions produce muscovite folia and fish, and quartz bands and ribbons. Muscovite and quartz are much weaker than the reactant feldspars and these reactions result in reaction softening. Moreover, the muscovite tends to align in contiguous bands that constitute textural softening. These mineral and textural modifications occurred at constant temperature and drove the transition from brittle to viscous deformation and the shift in deformation mechanism from cataclasis to dissolution-precipitation and reaction creep. These mylonitic rocks so produced are cut by K-feldspar veins that interrupt the mylonitic fabric. The veins add K-feldspar to the assemblage and these structures constitute both reaction and textural hardening. Finally these veins are boudinaged by continued viscous deformation in the mylonitic matrix, thus defining a late ductile strain event. Together these overprinting textures and microstructures demonstrate several oscillations between brittle and viscous deformation, all at lower greenschist facies conditions where only frictional behavior is predicted by experiments. The overlap of the depths of greenschist facies conditions with the base of the crustal seismic zone suggests that the implied oscillations in strain rate may have been related to the earthquake cycle.
KW - Diancang Shan
KW - Earthquake cycle
KW - Reaction hardening
KW - Reaction softening
KW - Red River shear zone
KW - Textural softening
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U2 - 10.1016/j.tecto.2012.09.019
DO - 10.1016/j.tecto.2012.09.019
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84874022441
SN - 0040-1951
VL - 587
SP - 46
EP - 62
JO - Tectonophysics
JF - Tectonophysics
ER -