scholarly journals The earthquake cycle in the dry lower continental crust: insights from two deeply exhumed terranes (Musgrave Ranges, Australia and Lofoten, Norway)

Author(s):  
Luca Menegon ◽  
Lucy Campbell ◽  
Neil Mancktelow ◽  
Alfredo Camacho ◽  
Sebastian Wex ◽  
...  

This paper discusses the results of field-based geological investigations of exhumed rocks exposed in the Musgrave Ranges (Central Australia) and in Nusfjord (Lofoten, Norway) that preserve evidence for lower continental crustal earthquakes with focal depths of approximately 25–40 km. These studies have established that deformation of the dry lower continental crust is characterized by a cyclic interplay between viscous creep (mylonitization) and brittle, seismic slip associated with the formation of pseudotachylytes (a solidified melt produced during seismic slip along a fault in silicate rocks). Seismic slip triggers rheological weakening and a transition to viscous creep, which may be already active during the immediate post-seismic deformation along faults initially characterized by frictional melting and wall-rock damage. The cyclical interplay between seismic slip and viscous creep implies transient oscillations in stress and strain rate, which are preserved in the shear zone microstructure. In both localities, the spatial distribution of pseudotachylytes is consistent with a local (deep) source for the transient high stresses required to generate earthquakes in the lower crust. This deep source is the result of localized stress amplification in dry and strong materials generated at the contacts with ductile shear zones, producing multiple generations of pseudotachylyte over geological time. This implies that both the short- and the long-term rheological evolution of the dry lower crust typical of continental interiors is controlled by earthquake cycle deformation. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Understanding earthquakes using the geological record’.

2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (7) ◽  
pp. eaaw0913 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arianne Petley-Ragan ◽  
Yehuda Ben-Zion ◽  
Håkon Austrheim ◽  
Benoit Ildefonse ◽  
François Renard ◽  
...  

Earthquakes in the continental crust commonly occur in the upper 15 to 20 km. Recent studies demonstrate that earthquakes also occur in the lower crust of collision zones and play a key role in metamorphic processes that modify its physical properties. However, details of the failure process and sequence of events that lead to seismic slip in the lower crust remain uncertain. Here, we present observations of a fault zone from the Bergen Arcs, western Norway, which constrain the deformation processes of lower crustal earthquakes. We show that seismic slip and associated melting are preceded by fracturing, asymmetric fragmentation, and comminution of the wall rock caused by a dynamically propagating rupture. The succession of deformation processes reported here emphasize brittle failure mechanisms in a portion of the crust that until recently was assumed to be characterized by ductile deformation.


Impact ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 (9) ◽  
pp. 6-8
Author(s):  
Luca Menegon ◽  
Iain Stewart

Understanding the short- and long-term mechanical behaviour of the lower crust is of fundamental importance when trying to understand the earthquake cycle and related hazard along active fault zones. In some regions some 20% of intracontinental earthquakes of magnitude > 5 nucleates in the lower crust at depth of 30-40 km. For example, a significant proportion of seismicity in the Himalaya, as well as aftershocks associated with the destructive 2001 Bhuj earthquake in India, nucleated in the granulitic lower crust of the Indian shield. Earthquakes in the continental interiors are often devastating and, over the past century, have killed significantly more people than earthquakes that occurred at plate boundaries. Thus, a thorough understanding of the earthquake cycle in intracontinental settings is essential. This requires knowledge of the mechanical behaviour and of the strength (by which Earth scientists commonly mean the maximum stress that rocks can sustain before deforming) of the lower crust. The most common conceptual model of the strength of the continental crust predicts a strong, seismogenic brittle upper crust (where the base of the seismogenic layer is typically considered to be at depth of 10-15 km), and a weak, viscous, aseismic lower crust. This model has been recently questioned by the finding that the lower crust can be seismic and, therefore, mechanically strong. The question arises, how thick is the seismogenic layer in the crust? Answering this question is crucial to determine the potential hazard caused by large earthquakes, which are also generally the deepest.<br/> Our limited knowledge of the mechanical behaviour of the lower crust is largely due to the lower crust itself being poorly accessible for direct geological observations, so that most of our knowledge derives from indirect geophysical measurements (like the distribution of earthquakes). There are only a few well-exposed large sections of exhumed continental lower crust in the world. One of these is located in the Lofoten islands (northern Norway), which were exhumed from their original deep crustal position during the opening of the North Atlantic Ocean.<br/> We propose an integrated, multi-disciplinary study of a network of brittle-viscous shear zones (i.e. zones of localized intense deformation of geological materials) from Lofoten, which records episodic rapid slip events (earthquakes) alternating with long-lasting aseismic creep. The study will link structural geology (analysis of geological faults and shear zones), petrology (analysis of the composition and textures of rocks), geochemistry (detailed chemical characterization of rocks and minerals) and experimental rock deformation (to reproduce in the lab under controlled conditions the deformation processes operative in the deep Earth's crust). This integrated dataset will provide a novel, clear picture of the mechanical behaviour of the continental lower crust during the earthquake cycle. Our direct geological and experimental observations will be tested against geophysical observations of currently active seismic deformation. The cumulative results of the projects will shed light on the currently poorly constrained mechanical behaviour of the lower crust during the earthquake cycle, and therefore on the sequence of inter-seismic slip (the period of slow accumulation of elastic deformation along a fault), co-seismic slip (the sudden rupture along a fault that is the earthquake) and post-seismic slip (the immediate period after an earthquake when the crust and the fault adjust to the modified state of crustal stress caused by an earthquake). This will greatly extend and complement existing efforts by the scientific community to understand and interpret the mechanical behaviour of rocks during the earthquake cycle recorded in the lower crust and the related hazard, and will provide key input for numerical models of continental dynamics.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Zhong ◽  
Arianne Petley-Ragan ◽  
Sarah Incel ◽  
Marcin Dabrowski ◽  
Niels Andersen ◽  
...  

&lt;p&gt;Earthquakes are among the most catastrophic geological events that last only several to tens of seconds. During earthquakes, many processes may occur including rupturing, frictional sliding, pore fluid pressurization and occasionally frictional melting. However, little direct records of these fast processes remain preserved through geological time. During rapid shearing, frictional melt may form that lubricates the rocks and facilitates further sliding. The frictional melt layer may quench quickly within seconds to minutes depending on its thickness. After quenching, the product pseudotachylyte preserves valuable information about the conditions when the frictional melt was generated. Here, we study pseudotachylyte from Holsn&amp;#248;y Island in the Bergen Arcs of Western Norway, an exhumed portion of the lower continental crust. The investigated pseudotachylyte vein is ca. 1-2 cm thick and free of injection veins along the 2 m visible length of the fault. The pseudotachylyte matrix is made up of fine-grained omphacite (Jd&lt;sub&gt;38&lt;/sub&gt;), sodic plagioclase (Ab&lt;sub&gt;83&lt;/sub&gt;) and kyanite with minor rutile and sulphides. Many dendritic garnets are found within the pseudotachylyte showing gradual grain size reduction towards the wall rock. This suggests that the garnets crystallized during rapid quenching. The stability of epidote, kyanite and quartz in the wall rock plagioclase, and omphacite and albitic plagioclase together with quartz in the pseudotachylyte matrix constrains the ambient P ca. 1.5-1.7 GPa and T ca. 650-750&amp;#176;C. Using Raman elastic barometry, the constrained pressure condition from quartz inclusions in the dendritic garnets in the pseudotachylyte is &gt; 2 GPa. Based on an elastic model (Eshelby&amp;#8217;s solution), it is not possible to maintain 0.5 GPa overpressure within a thin melt layer by thermal pressurization or melting expansion. A potential explanation is that GPa level differential stress was present in the wall rocks and the melt pressure approached the normal stress when shear rigidity vanished during frictional melting. Our study illustrates how overpressure can be created within frictional melt veins under conditions of high differential stress, and offers a mechanism that facilitates co-seismic weakening during lower crustal earthquakes. &amp;#160;&lt;/p&gt;


Geology ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric Pili ◽  
Simon M. F. Sheppard ◽  
Jean-Marc Lardeaux ◽  
Jean-Emmanuel Martelat ◽  
Christian Nicollet

2018 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 353-386 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory Dumond ◽  
Michael L. Williams ◽  
Sean P. Regan

Deeply exhumed granulite terranes have long been considered nonrepresentative of lower continental crust largely because their bulk compositions do not match the lower crustal xenolith record. A paradigm shift in our understanding of deep crust has since occurred with new evidence for a more felsic and compositionally heterogeneous lower crust than previously recognized. The >20,000-km2Athabasca granulite terrane locally provides a >700-Myr-old window into this type of lower crust, prior to being exhumed and uplifted to the surface between 1.9 and 1.7 Ga. We review over 20 years of research on this terrane with an emphasis on what these findings may tell us about the origin and behavior of lower continental crust, in general, in addition to placing constraints on the tectonic evolution of the western Canadian Shield between 2.6 and 1.7 Ga. The results reveal a dynamic lower continental crust that evolved compositionally and rheologically with time.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arianne Petley-Ragan ◽  
Yehuda Ben-Zion ◽  
Håkon Austrheim ◽  
Benoit Ildefonse ◽  
Francois Renard

&lt;p&gt;A significant number of studies in recent years have demonstrated that earthquakes in the lower crust are more abundant than previously thought. Specifically in continental collision zones, earthquakes are suggested to play a crucial role in permitting fluid infiltration and driving metamorphic transformation processes in crustal portions that are typically considered dry and metastable. However, the mechanisms that trigger brittle failure in the lower crust remain debated and the sequence of events that ultimately lead to seismic slip is unclear. To further understand this process we performed field and microstructural observations on an amphibolite facies fault (0.9-1 GPa) in granulite facies anorthosite from the Bergen Arcs, Western Norway. The fault preserves an exceptional record of brittle deformation and frictional melting that allows us to constrain the temporal sequence of deformation events. Most notably, the fault is flanked on one side by a damage zone where wall rock minerals are fragmented with little to no shear strain (pulverization). The fault core consists of a zoned pseudotachylyte bound on both sides by fine-grained cataclasites. Spatial relationships between these structures reveal that asymmetric pulverization of the wall rock and comminution preceded the seismic slip required to produce melting. These observations are consistent with the propagation of a dynamic shear rupture. Our study implies that high differential stress levels may exist within the dry lower crust of orogens, causing brittle faulting and earthquakes in a portion of the crust that has long been assumed to be characterized by ductile deformation.&lt;/p&gt;


Solid Earth ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 1635-1649 ◽  
Author(s):  
Friedrich Hawemann ◽  
Neil Mancktelow ◽  
Sebastian Wex ◽  
Giorgio Pennacchioni ◽  
Alfredo Camacho

Abstract. Garnet is a high-strength mineral compared to other common minerals such as quartz and feldspar in the felsic crust. In felsic mylonites, garnet typically occurs as porphyroclasts that mostly evade crystal plastic deformation, except under relatively high-temperature conditions. The microstructure of granulite facies garnet in felsic lower-crustal rocks of the Musgrave Ranges (Central Australia) records both fracturing and crystal plastic deformation. Granulite facies metamorphism at ∼1200 Ma generally dehydrated the rocks and produced millimetre-sized garnets in peraluminous gneisses. A later ∼550 Ma overprint under sub-eclogitic conditions (600–700 ∘C, 1.1–1.3 GPa) developed mylonitic shear zones and abundant pseudotachylyte, coeval with the neocrystallization of fine-grained, high-calcium garnet. In the mylonites, granulite facies garnet porphyroclasts are enriched in calcium along rims and fractures. However, these rims are locally narrower than otherwise comparable rims along original grain boundaries, indicating the contemporaneous diffusion and fracturing of garnet. The fractured garnets exhibit internal crystal plastic deformation, which coincides with areas of enhanced diffusion, usually along zones of crystal lattice distortion and dislocation walls associated with subgrain rotation recrystallization. The fracturing of garnet under dry lower-crustal conditions, in an otherwise viscously flowing matrix, requires transient high differential stress, most likely related to seismic rupture, consistent with the coeval development of abundant pseudotachylyte. Highlights. Garnet is deformed by fracturing and crystal plasticity under dry lower-crustal conditions. Ca diffusion profiles indicate multiple generations of fracturing. Diffusion is promoted along zones of higher dislocation density. Fracturing indicates transient high-stress (seismic) events in the lower continental crust.


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