IMPOSED SHEAR LOCALIZATION IN THE MANTLE SECTION OF AN OCEANIC PALEOTRANSFORM (BOGOTA PENINSULA SHEAR ZONE, NEW CALEDONIA)

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vasileios Chatzaras ◽  
◽  
Basil Tikoff ◽  
Seth C. Kruckenberg ◽  
Sarah Titus ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vasileios Chatzaras ◽  
◽  
Seth C. Kruckenberg ◽  
Sarah Titus ◽  
Basil Tikoff ◽  
...  

Lithosphere ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 221-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah J. Titus ◽  
Stephanie M. Maes ◽  
Bryn Benford ◽  
Eric C. Ferré ◽  
Basil Tikoff
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisa Ferrari ◽  
Arianna Secchiari ◽  
Alessandra Montanini ◽  
Dominique Cluzel

<p>Pyroxenites constitute the major form of heterogeneity in the upper mantle. Their occurrence in supra-subduction zone settings is mostly testified by veins and layers in refractory ophiolitic peridotites, where they represent a crucial witness of melt migration in the forearc/subarc environment [1,2]. The New Caledonia ophiolite hosts one of the largest forearc mantle section worldwide, providing a unique perspective into upper mantle processes. The sequence is dominated by ultra-depleted harzburgites [3], locally overlain by mafic-ultramafic cumulates [4,5,6]. The harzburgites are highly refractory residues that register a multi-phase evolution, including fluid-assisted melting in a forearc environment and contamination by fluid- and melt inputs triggered by Eocene subduction [1]. Pyroxenitic rocks intruding the harzburgites are only known in the Bogota peninsula shear zone, which records HT deformation along a paleotransform fault [7]. In this contribution, we report a comprehensive petrological and geochemical characterization on a new set of pyroxenites from this locality. The pyroxenites (~5-15 cm-thick) generally cut the peridotite foliation at variable angles, but concordant, locally boudinaged, layers also occur. Pyroxenite textures range from cumulitic to porphyroclastic or granoblastic-polygonal. The studied samples mostly consist of amphibole-bearing (5-44 vol.%) websterites, with variable amounts of orthopyroxene (27-67 vol.%) and almost constant clinopyroxene contents (~ 25-29 vol.%). Minor olivine-bearing orthopyroxenites are also present. Accessory phases include high-Ca (An= 82-86 mol%) plagioclase, Cr-rich spinel (Cr# = 50-61), sulfides and, occasionally, apatite. Pyroxenes displays high Mg# (Mg# Opx= 91-92; Mg# Cpx= 84-93), coupled with low Al2O3 contents (0.97-1.92 wt% and 1-2.42 wt% for orthopyroxene and clinopyroxene, respectively). Amphibole is high Mg# edenite. Application of conventional pyroxene thermometry yield equilibration temperatures ranging between 930-1040°C, comparable to the enclosing harzburgites (~ 950°C), whereas amphibole-plagioclase geothermometer provides lower temperatures (~ 800°C). Bulk rock composition of the websterites show variable Mg# (82-91) and REE concentrations ranging between 1 to 10 times chondritic values. They are characterized by flat to LREE-depleted (LaN/SmN 0.28-0.92) patterns, coupled to weak MREE-HREE fractionation (GdN/YbN = 1.73-1.92) and Eu negative anomalies. By contrast, orthopyroxenites display notably lower concentrations (0.1≤REE≤1 chondrite abundances). As a whole, clinopyroxene REE patterns of the websterites mirror bulk rocks at higher absolute values. Putative melts in equilibrium with clinopyroxene indicate strongly enriched compositions (up to 300 times chondritic values) coupled to variable LREE-HREE fractionation (LaN/LuN = 3-19) and flat to fractionated HREE (GdN/LuN 1-2). Such enriched liquids, which show some analogies with pre-obduction adakite-like dikes [8], have never been recorded in the MTZ cumulitic sequence of the New Caledonia ophiolite and shed new light on the magmatic activity in the early stage of subduction. </p><p>[1] Varfalvy, Canad Mineral, 1997, 35 (2), 543-570.<br>[2] Berly et al., J. Petrol., 2006, 47(8), 1531-1555.<br>[3] Secchiari et al., Geosc. Front., 2020, 11(1), 37–55. [4]. <br>[4] Marchesi et al., Chem. Geol., 2009, 266, 171-186.<br>[5] Pirard et al., J. Petrol., 2013, 54, 1759–1792.<br>[6] Secchiari et al., Contrib. Mineral. Petrol., 2018, 173(8), 66.<br>[7] Chatzaras et al., Geology, 2020, 48 (6): 569–573.<br>[8] Cluzel et al., Terra Nova, 2006, 6, 395–402.</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vasileios Chatzaras ◽  
Basil Tikoff ◽  
Seth C. Kruckenberg ◽  
Sarah J. Titus ◽  
Christian Teyssier ◽  
...  

<p>Mantle earthquakes that occur deeper than the 600 °C isotherm in oceanic transform faults indicate seismic rupturing at conditions where viscous deformation (bulk ductile behavior) is dominant.  However, direct geological evidence of earthquake-related deformation at ambient upper mantle conditions is rare, impeding our understanding of earthquake dynamics in plate-boundary fault systems.  The Bogota Peninsula Shear Zone (BPSZ), New Caledonia, is an ancient oceanic transform fault exhumed from upper mantle depths.  Ductile structures in the BPSZ formed at temperatures > 800 °C and microstructures indicate that differential stress varies spatially and temporally.  Spatial variation is observed as an increase in differential stress with strain toward localized zones of high strain; stress increases from 6–14 MPa in coarse grained tectonites to 11–22 MPa within 1–2 km wide mylonite zones.  Temporal stress variation is observed by the formation of micro-deformation zones that seem to have brittle precursors, are filled with fine-grained recrystallized olivine grains and crosscut the background fabrics in the harzburgites that host them.  The micro-deformation zones are not restricted to the mylonite zones, but rather are located throughout the BPSZ, having affected the protomylonites and the coarse grained tectonites.  The micro-deformation zones record stresses of 22–81 MPa that are 2–6 times higher than the background, steady-state stresses in the surrounding mantle rocks.  We interpret the observed spatial and temporal variations in microstructures and stresses in the upper mantle to demonstrate the influence of seismic events in the upper part of the oceanic transform fault system.  We attribute the increase in stress with strain to be the result of imposed localization induced by downward propagation of the seismic rupture into the underlying mantle.  The micro-deformation zones could result from brittle fractures caused by earthquake-related deformation in the mantle section of the transform fault, which are in turn overprinted by ductile deformation.</p><p> </p><p>Synthesizing the spatial and temporal variations in stresses and microstructures in the Bogota Peninsula Shear Zone we propose a conceptual model where brittle fracturing and shearing take place during coseismic rupture at increased stress, ductile flow at decaying stress is concentrated in the micro-deformation zones during postseismic relaxation, and uniformly distributed creep at low stress occurs in the host-rocks of the micro-deformation zones during interseismic deformation.  The critical result from the studied paleotransform zone is that the fine-grained micro-deformation zones and the mylonites do not represent weak zones.  Instead, they form by dislocation creep at transient high-stress deformation during the seismic cycle.  The spatial distribution of the micro-deformation zones also suggests that repeated stress cycles in oceanic transform faults may not localize strain in pre-existing shear zones but disperse strain across the structure.</p>


Geology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 48 (6) ◽  
pp. 569-573 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vasileios Chatzaras ◽  
Basil Tikoff ◽  
Seth C. Kruckenberg ◽  
Sarah J. Titus ◽  
Christian Teyssier ◽  
...  

Abstract The Bogota Peninsula shear zone in New Caledonia (southwest Pacific Ocean) is the exhumed mantle section of an oceanic transform zone. Ductile fabrics in this zone formed at temperatures >820 °C, and differential stresses estimated from microstructures vary spatially and temporally. Along a transform-perpendicular transect, stresses increase toward the high-strain areas. We attribute this stress gradient to an increase in strain rate caused by imposed rather than intrinsic strain localization. Temporal stress variations are indicated by the formation of fine-grained microdeformation zones (MDZs) that truncate and offset coarser grains. We interpret the MDZs to result from zones of brittle deformation caused by earthquake fracture propagation downward in the upper mantle, which are in turn overprinted by ductile deformation at stresses 2–6 times higher (22–81 MPa) than their surrounding steady-state fabrics. We interpret the spatial and temporal variations in microstructures and stresses as reflecting different stages of the seismic cycle in oceanic lithosphere.


2021 ◽  
Vol 249 ◽  
pp. 03022
Author(s):  
Keng-Lin Lee ◽  
Riccardo Artoni ◽  
Fu-Ling Yang ◽  
Patrick Richard

This work employs a Landau-Ginzburg-type nonlocal rheology model to account for shear localization in a wall-bounded dense granular flow. The configuration is a 3D shear cell in which the bottom bumpy wall moves at a constant speed, while a load pressure is applied at the top bumpy wall, with flat but frictional lateral walls. At a fixed pressure, shear zones transit from the top to the bottom when increasing lateral wall friction coefficient. With a quasi-2D model simplification, asymptotic solutions for fluidization order parameters near the top and bottom boundaries are sought separately. Both solutions are the Airy function in terms of a depth coordinate scaled by a characteristic length which measures the width of the corresponding shear zone. The theoretical predictions for the shear zone widths against lateral wall friction coefficient and load pressure agree well with data extracted from particle-based simulation for the flow.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessandra Montanini ◽  
Arianna Secchiari ◽  
Delphine Bosch ◽  
Dominique Cluzel ◽  
Patrizia Macera

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