Affiliation:
1. Department of Earth and Environmental Science New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology Socorro NM USA
Abstract
AbstractThe brittle‐plastic transition (BPT), the strongest part of the crust, is critical to continental geodynamics but is poorly understood relative to simpler crust above and below. It is typically represented as a depth transition from brittle/frictional to plastic/viscous deformation controlled by temperature and pressure. Footwalls of low‐angle normal faults (LANFs) exhumed through the BPT provide rock records that challenge this view. Three well‐studied LANF footwalls are reviewed. All record geochemical, mineralogical and fluid‐related controls on embrittlement, not just monotonic P‐T decrease. Two quartz‐rich examples record embrittlement at unexpectedly high T (≥450–500°C) that was modulated by wetting characteristics of fluids. One had an inverted BPT: brittle fracture beneath contemporaneous mylonites. In another study, a brittle LANF grew from plastic mylonites due to mineralogic changes that strengthened parts, causing initial frictional slip and cataclasis on weak planes that ultimately linked. In all, geologically abrupt small‐scale processes controlled behavior at kilometer scales. Similar processes likely affect other tectonic settings and seismic cycles. Such processes offer fertile research opportunities in continental geodynamics; they will be increasingly tractable as computational abilities improve. Adaptive, multi‐scale approaches including the effects of fluid‐rock geochemistry and mineralogical changes on rock strength and deformation are needed. Thoughtful modeling approaches may yield key insights into the positive and negative feedbacks that are likely. Discontinuous deformation is probably needed explicitly along with exploration of initial and boundary conditions.
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)