Using apatite to resolve the age and protoliths of mid-crustal shear zones: A case study from the Taxaquara Shear Zone, SE Brazil

Lithos ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 378-379 ◽  
pp. 105817
Author(s):  
B.V. Ribeiro ◽  
J.A. Mulder ◽  
F.M. Faleiros ◽  
C.L. Kirkland ◽  
P.A. Cawood ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giancarlo Molli ◽  
Luca Menegon ◽  
Alessandro Malasoma

Abstract. The switching in deformation mode (from distributed to localized) and mechanisms (viscous versus frictional) represent a relevant issue in the frame of crustal deformation, being also connected with the concept of the brittle-ductile transition and seismogenesis. In subduction environment, switching in deformation mode and mechanisms may be inferred along the subduction interface, in a transition zone between the highly coupled (seismogenic zone) and decoupled deeper aseismic domain (stable slip). On the other hand, the role of brittle precursors in nucleating crystal-plastic shear zones has received more and more consideration being now recognized as fundamental in the localization of deformation and shear zone development, thus representing a case in which switching deformation mode and mechanisms interact and relate to each other. This contribution analyzes an example of a crystal plastic shear zone localized by brittle precursor formed within a host granitic-protomylonite during deformation in subduction-related environment. The studied structures, possibly formed by transient instability associated with fluctuations of pore fluid pressure and episodic strain rate variations may be considered as a small scale example of fault behaviour associated with a cycle of interseismic creep and coseismic rupture or a new analogue for episodic tremors and slow slip structures. Our case-study represents, therefore, a fossil example of association of fault structures related with stick-slip strain accomodation during subduction of continental crust.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matteo Simonetti ◽  
Rodolfo Carosi ◽  
Chiara Montomoli ◽  
Salvatore Iaccarino

<p>Paleogeographic reconstruction and recognition of the tectono-metamorphic evolution of ancient orogenic belt is often complex. The combination of an adequate amount of paleomagnetic, metamorphic, structural and geochronological data is necessary. Fundamental data derive from the study of regional-scale shear zones, that can be directly observed, by combining detailed field work with structural analysis, microstructural analysis and petrochronology. The Southern European Variscan Belt in the Mediterranean area was partially overprinted by the Alpine cycle (Stampfli and Kozur, 2006) and correlations are mainly based on lithological similarities. Little attention has been paid to the compatibility of structures in the dispersed fragments. A main debate is the connection among the Corsica-Sardinia Block (CSB), the Maures-Tanneron Massif (MTM) and the future Alpine External Crystalline Massifs (ECM) (Stampfli et al., 2002; Advokaat et al., 2014) and if these sectors were connected by a network of shear zones of regional extent, known as the East Variscan Shear Zone (EVSZ).</p><p>We present a multidisciplinary study of shear zones cropping out in the CSB (the Posada-Asinara shear zone; Carosi et al., 2020), in the MTM (the Cavalaire Fault; Simonetti et al., 2020a) and in the ECM (the Ferriere-Mollières and the Emosson-Berard shear zones; Simonetti et al., 2018; 2020b).</p><p>Kinematic and finite strain analysis allowed to recognize a transpressional deformation, with a major component of pure shear and a variable component of simple shear, coupled with general flattening deformation. Syn-kinematic paragenesis, microstructures and quartz c-axis fabrics revealed that shear deformation, in all the studied sectors, occurred under decreasing temperature starting from amphibolite-facies up to greenschist-facies. A systematic petrochronological study (U-Th-Pb on monazite collected in the sheared rocks) was conducted in order to constrain the timing of deformation. We obtained ages ranging between ~340 Ma and ~320 Ma. Ages of ~340-330 Ma can be interpreted as the beginning of the activity of the EVSZ along its older branches while ages of ~320 Ma, obtained in all the shear zones, demonstrate that they were all active in the same time span.</p><p>The multidisciplinary approach revealed a similar kinematics and tectono-metamorphic evolution of the studied shear zones contributing to better constrain the extension and timing the EVSZ and to strength the paleogeographic reconstructions of the Southern Variscan belt during Late Carboniferous time, with important implications on the evolution of the Mediterranean area after the Late Paleozoic. This case study demonstrates how paleogeographic reconstructions could benefit from datasets obtained from large-scale structures (i.e., shear zones) that can be directly investigated.</p><p> </p><p>Advokaat et al. (2014). Earth and Planetary Science Letters 401, 183–195</p><p> </p><p>Carosi et al. (2012). Terra Nova 24, 42–51</p><p> </p><p>Carosi and Palmeri (2002). Geological Magazine 139.</p><p> </p><p>Carosi et al. (2020). Geosciences 10, 288.</p><p> </p><p>Simonetti et al (2020a). International Journal of Earth Sciences 109, 2261–2285</p><p> </p><p>Simonetti et al. (2020b). Tectonics 39</p><p> </p><p>Simonetti et al. (2018). International Journal of Earth Sciences. 107, 2163–2189</p><p> </p><p>Stampfli and Kozur (2006). Geological Society, London, Memoirs 32, 57–82</p><p> </p><p>Stampfli et al. (2002). Journal of the Virtual Explorer 8, 77</p>


Solid Earth ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 767-788 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giancarlo Molli ◽  
Luca Menegon ◽  
Alessandro Malasoma

Abstract. The switching in deformation mode (from distributed to localized) and mechanisms (viscous versus frictional) represent a relevant issue in the frame of crustal deformation, being also connected with the concept of the brittle–ductile transition and seismogenesis. In a subduction environment, switching in deformation mode and mechanisms and scale of localization may be inferred along the subduction interface, in a transition zone between the highly coupled (seismogenic zone) and decoupled deeper aseismic domain (stable slip). However, the role of brittle precursors in nucleating crystal-plastic shear zones has received more and more consideration being now recognized as fundamental in some cases for the localization of deformation and shear zone development, thus representing a case in which switching deformation mechanisms and scale and style of localization (deformation mode) interact and relate to each other. This contribution analyses an example of a millimetre-scale shear zone localized by brittle precursor formed within a host granitic protomylonite. The studied structures, developed in ambient pressure–temperature (P–T) conditions of low-grade blueschist facies (temperature T of ca. 300 °C and pressure P ≥ 0. 70 GPa) during involvement of Corsican continental crust in the Alpine subduction. We used a multidisciplinary approach by combining detailed microstructural and petrographic analyses, crystallographic preferred orientation by electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD), and palaeopiezometric studies on a selected sample to support an evolutionary model and deformation path for subducted continental crust. We infer that the studied structures, possibly formed by transient instability associated with fluctuations of pore fluid pressure and episodic strain rate variations, may be considered as a small-scale example of fault behaviour associated with a cycle of interseismic creep and coseismic rupture or a new analogue for episodic tremors and slow-slip structures. Our case study represents, therefore, a fossil example of association of fault structures related to stick-slip strain accommodation during subduction of continental crust.


The Precambrian orogenic belts of Africa are often defined by ductile shear zones which developed in response to large displacements, and which mark orogenic ‘ fronts ’ between mobile and stable parts of the crust. They are thought to represent the major crustal reflectors seen by seismic reflection profiling in younger orogenic belts. These orogenic fronts are connected by shear zones that transfer displacement or accommodate different displacements, between orogenic segments. Smaller shears within an orogenic belt occur as a result of differential movements. These shear zones are seen to pass from flat-lying to steep structures and may have a thrust or strike-slip sense. They compare with the staircase trajectories characteristic of foreland thrust belts. In common with thrust belts, the geometry of the shear zones can be used to estimate displacement direction, as can regional extensional fabrics developed in the associated high-strain tectonites. Central Africa has been previously described as a complex network of late Proterozoic ‘mobile belts’. The recognition of similar displacements and time equivalence in these belts allows their reinterpretation in terms of a linked thrust and strike-slip shear-zone system. An example is the Damaran, Lufilian, Zambezi and Ukingan system. These orogenic belts share a similar displacement picture and broad time equivalence and were apparently linked in a lower crustal shear zone of continental dimensions. This shear zone system appears to have developed under a single tectonic framework


1993 ◽  
Vol 130 (2) ◽  
pp. 233-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. I. Alsop ◽  
D. H. W. Hutton

AbstractThe dominant structure controlling the disposition of Dalradian stratigraphy in mid-Ulster has hitherto been regarded as a southeast-facing gently inclined F1 anticline, a gross geometry modelled on, and thought to be a possible correlative of, the Tay Nappe in Scotland. Remapping of the supposedly inverted southern limb of this major fold reveals that much of it is in fact the correct way up. However, a stratigraphie repetition coupled with a reversal in younging does occur in the Sperrin Mountains, much further south than previously realized. This hitherto unrecognized upward southeast-facing isoclinal Sperrin Nappe is, however, a D2 structure, traceable for at least 40 km along strike and responsible for a regional stratigraphie inversion over an area of 300 km2. Following D2, a major 10 km thick D3 ductile shear zone resulted in translation towards the east-southeast. In the south, this deformation carried the Dalradian over Ordovician volcanics of the Tyrone Igneous Complex along the Omagh Thrust. Penecontemporaneity of magmatism with deformation clearly demonstrates that D3 is Caledonian (Arenig-Llanvirn). This deformation correlates with similar southeast-directed Caledonian thrusting in southern Donegal and Connemara. The apparent absence of Dalradian deformation of this age in southwestern Scotland may imply that Caledonian collision of outboard terranes with the miogeoclinal margin was initiated in Ireland and/or subsequent strike-slip has removed the evidence for deformation of this age from southwestern Scotland. The D3 shear zone in the Sperrin Mountains affects a very large volume of psammitic rocks. Within this shear zone the strain is not markedly higher than surrounding areas; however, its existence is demonstrated by the reorientation of mineral lineations over a large area. Such broad zones of only moderate strain may, we believe, be typical of translatory tectonics in areas of the mid-crust where there is little lithological diversity.


2016 ◽  
Vol 46 (4) ◽  
pp. 547-566 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Vinagre ◽  
◽  
Rudolph Allard Johannes Trouw ◽  
Hugo Kussama ◽  
Rodrigo Peternel ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT: The study area is localized in the Socorro nappe, part of the southern Brasília belt, with a minor part in the Embu terrane, part of the central Ribeira belt. Three phases of deformation were detected, Dn-1, Dn and Dn+1. Sn-1 seems to be generally transposed into Sn, but in the northwestern part it is well preserved, dipping about 60º to W and SW, with a stretching and/or mineral lineation plunging down dip. The main foliation in most of the area is Sn, dipping about 70º to SSE. Dn folds are tight to isoclinal, with axes that plunge about 40º to SW. Quartz-feldspathic segregation veins are folded by Dn. The structures related to Dn-1 and Dn are cut and modified by four important shear zones ascribed to deformation phase Dn+1. Two samples of a granite that is elongated along the Caxambu shear zone, and also cut by it, were dated. One yielded a crystallization age of 575 ± 5 Ma, and the other one, from the shear zone, an age of 567 ± 8 Ma, interpreted either as representing the age of movement along the Caxambu shear zone, or as metamorphic growth.


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 89-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
José Ferreira de Araújo Neto ◽  
Glenda Lira Santos ◽  
Igor Manoel Belo de Albuquerque e Souza ◽  
Sandra De Brito Barreto ◽  
Lauro Cézar Montefalco de Lira Santos ◽  
...  

The integration of geological data obtained through fieldwork, remote sensing and airborne geophysics has been shown to be efficient in creation of precise geological maps. The Vieirópolis region, sited in the west of the Rio Grande do Norte Subprovince of the Borborema Province, is characteristically made up of rocks intensely deformed by transcurrent shear zones and late brittle structures which control the mineralization of gemmological and industrial minerals. ASTER GDEM and airborne geophysical images (magnetometry and gamma-ray spectrometry) were used in order to enhance the geological knowledge of this region and to facilitate the identification and delimitation of structures and lithologies mapped during stages of fieldwork. Thus, a geological map on a scale of 1:50,000 was achieved, made up of six main lithological units and three new shear zones (Vieirópolis, Lastro and São Pedro), as well as the NE-SW-trending Portalegre Shear Zone. Within the newly mapped structures, the Vieirópolis Shear Zone stands out due to its expressiveness. Aeromagnetometry data suggest that this zone originated on the edge of the Brejo das Freiras Subbasin, part of the Portalegre Shear Zone System. NW-SE, ESE-WNW and E-W lineaments were correlated to lesser extent brittle structures which sometimes transversely cut the regional foliation, allowing pegmatite fluids to rise. The RGB ternary composition map (K, eTh, eU) also corroborates the presence of these structures, besides helping to determine lithological units. In this case study, the integration of direct and indirect data showed to be essential for the understanding and producing of local geological map.


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