Fracture Zones and Transform Faults

2014 ◽  
pp. 255-300
Author(s):  
Roger Hekinian
Author(s):  
Peter Molnar

‘Fracture zones and transform faults’ introduces fracture zones, huge, long linear scars in the seafloor first mapped in the 1950s, and their interpretation in terms of a new concept, transform faulting. Fracture zones are made at mid-ocean ridges, where the seafloor spreads apart. Segments of zones of spreading intersect fracture zones at right angles, along which transform faulting transfers the spreading on one spreading zone to another. As the seafloor spreads, and plates move apart at mid-ocean ridges, fracture zones grow longer. Testing this idea relied on the study of earthquakes that occurred on the transform faults, using seismographs on distant continents. This chapter introduces readers to the pertinent seismological methods by which this was achieved.


Lithosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (Special 6) ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Hazra ◽  
A. Saha ◽  
A. Verencar ◽  
M. Satyanarayanan ◽  
S. Ganguly ◽  
...  

Abstract The phenomena of reactive percolation of enriched asthenospheric melts and pervasive melt-rock interactions at mid oceanic ridge-rift systems are the principal proponents for mantle refertilization and compositional heterogeneity. This study presents new mineralogical and geochemical data for the abyssal peridotites exposed along the Vema and Vityaz fracture zones of the Central Indian Ridge (CIR) to address factors contributing to the chemical heterogeneity of CIR mantle. Cr-spinel (Cr#: 0.37-0.59) chemistry classifies these rocks as alpine-type peridotites and corroborates a transitional depleted MORB type to enriched, SSZ-related arc-type magma composition. HFSE and REE geochemistry further attests to an enriched intraoceanic forearc mantle affinity. The distinct boninitic signature of these rocks reflected by LREE>MREE<HREE and PGE compositions substantiates refertilization of the CIR mantle harzburgites by boninitic melt percolation concomitant to initiation of oceanic subduction. The mineral chemistry, trace, and PGE signatures of the CIR peridotites envisage (i) replenishment of depleted sub-ridge upper mantle by impregnation of subduction-derived boninitic melts, (ii) tectonic transition from mid oceanic ridge-rift to an embryonic suprasubduction zone, and (iii) initiation of spontaneous intraoceanic subduction along submarine transform faults and fracture zones of slow-spreading CIR owing to the weakness and mechanical instability of older, denser, and negatively buoyant Indian Ocean lithosphere.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Hensen ◽  
Joao C. Duarte ◽  
Paola Vannucchi ◽  
Adriano Mazzini ◽  
Mark A. Lever ◽  
...  

1988 ◽  
Vol 25 (11) ◽  
pp. 1824-1833 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen Kumarapeli ◽  
Karen St. Seymour ◽  
Hillar Pintson ◽  
Elizabeth Hasselgren

Allochthonous masses of basaltic lava flows and related tuffs are present in several localities in an approximately 30 km long segment of the western margin of the Granby Nappe, in southeastern Quebec. They occur either as numerous small blocks in the Drummondville wildflysch related to the nappe or as larger masses intercalated with sedimentary sequences of limestone and shale of probable Late Cambrian to Early Ordovician age. These latter occurrences and the associated sedimentary units form "island-like" areas within lithologies of the Granby Nappe consisting of Cambrian sediments that accumulated on the continental rise. Their overall characteristics suggest that they represent slabs derived from the shelf margin of Laurentia and incorporated into the cratonward-moving nappes during the Middle Ordovician Taconian Orogeny.The volcanic rocks are mainly transitional but include some alkali olivine basalts. There are some indications that their affinities are to basaltic rocks of seamount chains localized along leaky transform faults. The segment of the continental margin from which the volcanic rocks were derived originated in the latest Precambian times, by rifting involving a rift–rift–rift (RRR) triple junction. Thus, it was a likely location for deep-seated transverse fracture zones linked to ridge-to-ridge transform faults of Iapetus. Therefore, the best explanation of the volcanism is that it was localized along such fracture zones. This episode of Late Cambrian – Early Ordovician volcanism related to the Iapetus cycle is probably analogous to the recently documented Early Cretaceous volcanism related to the Atlantic cycle on the northeastern American margin.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ingo Grevemeyer ◽  
Lars Rüpke ◽  
Jason Morgan ◽  
Karthik Iyper ◽  
Colin Devey

<p>Oceanic transform faults are seismically and tectonically active major plate boundaries. Their inactive traces are called fracture zones and may cross entire ocean basins. Plate tectonics idealizes transforms to be conservative two-dimensional strike-slip boundaries where lithosphere is neither created nor destroyed, and along which the lithosphere cools and deepens as a function of plate age. Here, we present constraints from a new compilation of high-resolution multibeam bathymetric data from 41 oceanic transforms covering all spreading rates. Statistical data show that all transform faults are considerably deeper than adjacent spreading segments and that the depth of transform valleys increases with decreasing spreading rate. The trend of increasing transform depth seems to be governed by age-offset. Further, accretion at ridge-transform intersections appears strongly asymmetric, with outside corners showing shallower relief and more extensive magmatism while inside corners have deep nodal basins and appear magmatically starved. We use a three-dimensional viscoplastic numerical model to survey the relationship between transform depth and age-offset and  use high-resolution bathymetric data to study the interaction between adjacent spreading segments and transform faults at their intersection, the ridge-transform intersection or RTI. Our global compilation of multibeam bathymetry suggest that processes acting at RTIs are independent of spreading rate, contradicting deductions from gravity field observations which seemed to imply a strong spreading rate dependence of processes shaping transform faults and fracture zones.</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mathilde Cannat ◽  
Deborah Smith ◽  
Daniel Fornari ◽  
Vicki Ferrini ◽  
Javier Escartin

<p><span>The pioneering seafloor mapping by Marie Tharp played a key role in the acceptance of the plate tectonic theory. Her physiographic maps,  published with Bruce Heezen,  covered the Earth’s oceans and revealed with astonishing accuracy the submarine landscape. She exposed the full extent of the global mid-ocean ridge system, documented features such as seamounts and volcanic chains, trenches, and transform faults. Marie Tharp co-authored the first papers describing the major fracture zones in the Central Atlantic (Chain, Romanche, Vema). In 1952, she also discovered that the Atlantic ridge has a central valley (the axial valley), and convinced her colleague Bruce Heezen that it, which corresponds to sustained seismicity (highlighted by other researchers at the same time thanks to the worldwide networking of seismological stations), is a rift that separates the eastern and western provinces of the Atlantic Ocean. Tharp and Heezen were not yet talking about plate tectonics at this time. But when, at the beginning of the 1960s, the first magnetic anomaly maps showed that the oceans were "young", and that the age of the seabed increased with the distance from the ridges, their physiographic map became an essential element in understanding the role that these ridges play, as well as the distribution of the main current terrestrial plates. In this poster, we present original maps and sketches that document this key contribution to the understanding of the Earth's tectonics.</span></p>


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