The Geometry, Spatial Distribution and Texture of Slate‐Hosted Calcite Veins in the Helvetic Flysch Units—Insights in Structural and Fluid Processes Within a Paleo‐Accretionary Complex

Author:

Akker Ismay Vénice12ORCID,Schrank Christoph345,Herwegh Marco1ORCID,Berger Alfons1ORCID,Jones Michael467ORCID,Kewish Cameron M.89ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Geological Sciences University of Bern Bern Switzerland

2. Now at Structural Geology and Tectonics Group Geological Institute ETH Zürich Zürich Switzerland

3. School of Earth and Atmospheric Science Queensland University of Technology Brisbane QLD Australia

4. Planetary Surface Exploration Queensland University of Technology Brisbane QLD Australia

5. Centre for Data Science Queensland University of Technology Brisbane QLD Australia

6. Central Analytical Research Facility Institute of Future Environments Queensland University of Technology Brisbane QLD Australia

7. School of Chemistry and Physics Queensland University of Technology Brisbane QLD Australia

8. Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation Australian Synchrotron Clayton VIC Australia

9. Department of Mathematical and Physical Sciences School of Computing, Engineering and Mathematical Sciences La Trobe University Bundoora VIC Australia

Abstract

AbstractThe exhumed Infrahelvetic Flysch Units in the eastern central Alps in Switzerland are a field analog to modern accretionary wedges at active plate boundaries. In these seismically active convergent settings, water‐saturated sediments undergo consolidation, and diagenetic to low‐grade metamorphic processes cause complex fluid‐rock interactions. To contribute to the understanding of structural and fluid processes and their interaction with seismic activity, we present quantitative information on the geometrical and spatial distribution of slate‐hosted calcite veins from the Infrahelvetic Flysch Units that show mutual overprinting relationships with the ductile phyllosilicate‐rich matrix. Two vein systems that form in the deeper part of the inner wedge are characterized: (a) layer‐parallel veins (meter‐scale) forming spatially repetitive vein‐arrays and (b) pervasively distributed, steep micron‐veinlets, that cross‐cut the thicker layer‐parallel veins and the ductile matrix. Synchrotron X‐ray Fluorescence Microscopy (XFM) is instrumental in detecting previously unseen densely spaced micron‐veinlets. The spatial distribution of micron‐veinlets indicates pervasive layer‐perpendicular fluid transport in response to dissolution‐precipitation creep through the wedge. Layer‐parallel veins form vein‐arrays with thicknesses on the meter‐scale suggesting that fluids are progressively localized in channels up‐scale. Both vein sets form in an alternating fashion with two different enhanced flux directions, which could be indicative for a critically stressed wedge with near‐lithostatic fluid pressures. The layer‐parallel veins and vein‐arrays could represent seismic events with low magnitude earthquakes (Mw up to 4.0) or slow‐slip events currently found at active plate boundaries, while micron‐veinlets and dissolution‐precipitation processes accommodate slow interseismic deformation.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics

Reference125 articles.

1. Akker I. V.(2020).The evolution of slate microstructures during the accretion of foreland basin sediments and implications for mechanical strength fluid flow and seismicity in accretionary wedges(Unpublished). Dissertation.Institute of Geological Sciences Faculty of Science.https://doi.org/10.7892/boris.146962

2. The evolution of slate microfabrics during progressive accretion of foreland basin sediments

3. Structural and chemical resetting processes in white mica and their effect on K-Ar data during low temperature metamorphism

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