Mining-induced deformation in potash yield pillars, Vanscoy, Saskatchewan

1993 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 297-307 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rui Chen ◽  
W. C. Brisbin ◽  
B. Stimpson

Mining-induced deformation of potash yield pillars in the Cominco potash mine at Vanscoy, Saskatchewan, has been documented by mapping deformational structures, determining changes in pillar width and in thicknesses of potash and interbedded clay layers, and analyses of rock fabrics in samples collected from three yield pillars. Pillar deformation over a period of 8 years can be shown to have involved progressive bulk rock flattening, followed by development of shear zones at pillar corners, development of shear wedges at pillar margins, and detachment of these wedges into adjacent rooms. Furthermore, this sequence appears to be repetitive. Strain in halite involves fracturing and displacement and rotation of fragments, strain in sylvite is continuous, and grain boundary sliding has been an important mechanism in the deformation. Although the fabric anisotropy cannot be used to assess total bulk rock strain, the component of strain related to sylvite shape change has been examined during progressive failure of the pillars. The values of strain in the principal strain directions based on sylvite shape are estimated as 42% shortening in the subvertical direction, 37% subhorizontal elongation perpendicular to the original openings, and 25% subhorizontal elongation parallel to the original openings. Key words : yield pillar, potash, fabric analysis, induced deformation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florian Fusseis ◽  
Craig Allsop

<p>Shear zones are important conduits that facilitate the bidirectional migration of fluids and dissolved solids across the middle crust. It is a relatively recent revelation that mylonitic deformation in such shear zones can result in the formation of synkinematic pores that are potentially utilised in long-range fluid migration. The pores definitely influence a shear zone’s hydraulic transport properties on the grain scale, facilitating synkinematic fluid-rock interactions and mass transfer. Our understanding of how exactly various forms of synkinematic porosity integrate with the kinematics and dynamics of shear zones is still growing. Here we show a previously undescribed form of synkinematic porosity in an unweathered, greenschist-facies psammitic ultramylonite from the Cap de Creus Northern Shear Belt (Spain). The sizeable, open pores with volumes > 50k µm3 appear exclusively next to albitic feldspar porphyroclasts, which themselves float in a fine-grained, polymineralic ultramylonitic matrix that likely deformed by grain size-sensitive creep and viscous grain boundary sliding. The pores wrap around their host clasts, occupying asymmetric strain shadows and tailing off into the mylonitic foliation. A detailed analysis using high-resolution backscatter electron imaging and non-invasive synchrotron-based x-ray microtomography confirms that the pores are isolated from each other. We found no evidence for weathering of the samples, or any significant post-mylonitic overprint, unequivocally supporting a synkinematic origin of the pores. </p><p>We propose that this strain shadow porosity formed through the rotations of the Ab porphyroclasts, which was governed by the clasts’ shapes and elongation. The ultramylonitic matrix was critical in enabling the formation of pores in the clast’s strain shadows. In the matrix, the individual grains were displaced mostly parallel to the shear direction. As a consequence of clast rotation it can be expected that, in the strain shadows, matrix grains followed diverging movement vectors. As a result, phase boundaries in the YZ plane experienced tensile forces, leading to the opening of pores. We infer that this tensile decoupling among matrix grains established a hydraulic gradient that drained the matrix locally and filled the pores with fluid. The fact that the strain shadow pores remained open in our samples suggests a chemical equilibrium with the fluid. Pore shape and volume will have been subject to continuous modification during ongoing matrix deformation and clast rotation.</p><p>This form of synkinematic porosity constitutes a puzzling, yet obvious way to maintain surprisingly large pores in ultramylonites whose transport properties are otherwise likely determined by creep cavitation and the granular fluid pump (Fusseis et al., 2009). We envisage that the strain shadow megapores worked in sync with the granular fluid pump in the ultramylonitic matrix and, while the overall porosity of ultramylonites may be small, locally, substantial fluid reservoirs were available to service fluid-rock interaction and fluid-mediated mass transfer. Our findings add another puzzle piece to our evolving understanding of synkinematic transport properties of mid-crustal ultramylonites and fluid-rock interaction in shear zones at the brittle-to-ductile transition.</p>



1993 ◽  
Vol 57 (386) ◽  
pp. 55-66 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Brown ◽  
K. R. McClay

AbstractThe Vangorda Pb-Zn-Ag orebody is a 7.1 M tonne, polydeformed stratiform massive sulphide deposit in the Anvil mining district, Yukon, Canada. Five sulphide lithofacies have been identified within the desposit with a typical mineralogy of pyrite, sphalerite, galena, and barite. Pyrrhotite-sphaleritemagnetite assembalges are locally developed. Etched polished sections of massive pyrite ores display relict primary depositional pyrite textures such as colloform growth zoning and spheroidal/framboidal features. A wide variety of brittle deformation, ductile deformation, and annealing textures have been identified. Brittle deformation textures include thin zones of intense cataclasis, grain indentation and axial cracking, and grain boundary sliding features. Ductile deformation textures include strong preferred grain shape orientations, dislocation textures, grain boundary migration, dynamic recrystallisation and pressure solution textures. Post deformational annealing has produced grain growth with lobate grain boundaries, 120° triple junctions and idioblastic pyrite porphyroblasts. The distribution of deformation textures within the Vangorda orebody suggests strong strain partitioning along fold limbs and fault/shear zones, it is postulated that focussed fluid flow in these zones had significant effects on the deformation of these pyritic ores.



2010 ◽  
Vol 47 (4) ◽  
pp. 486-496 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Sultan ◽  
B. Savoye ◽  
G. Jouet ◽  
D. Leynaud ◽  
P. Cochonat ◽  
...  

The Var prodelta progrades across a straight, narrow shelf (less than 2 km wide) with a very steep continental slope reaching locally more than 30°. Historically, the Var delta front is sadly famous for the 1979 catastrophic submarine landslide that resulted in several casualties and infrastructural damage. Geotechnical and geophysical investigations carried out in late 2007 to the east of the 1979 landslide scar provide evidence for the possible occurrence of a new important sedimentary collapse and submarine landslide. Geophysical data acquired in the area show the presence of several seafloor morphological steps rooted to shallow subsurface seismic reflections. Moreover, in situ piezocone measurements demonstrate the presence of several shear zones at the border of the shelf break at different depths below the seafloor. The aim of this technical note is to present and discuss acquired geotechnical and geophysical data in terms of failure mechanisms and submarine landslides. Both geophysical and geotechnical data suggest the start-up of a progressive failure mechanism and reveal the possible occurrence of a submarine landslide and the urgent need for mitigation procedures.



1987 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 556-564 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. H. Brodie ◽  
E. H. Rutter

It is proposed that one of the most important mechanisms of interrelationship between deformation and metamorphism is the facilitation of one of several grain-size-sensitive deformation mechanisms resulting from the formation of fine-grained products of a metamorphic reaction. During prograde metamorphism, such effects are likely to be transient, because grain coarsening and textural equilibration are likely in response to rising temperature conditions. Thus deformation mechanisms are often difficult to infer from such naturally deformed rocks.In localized shear zones exhibiting retrogressive metamorphism, evidence of enhanced deformability by such mechanisms is most likely to be preserved, because cooling conditions inhibit grain growth and both deformed and undeformed rocks are likely to be preserved.An experimental study has been made of the effects of deformation on serpentinite under conditions of progressive dehydration but with controlled pore pressure. A marked weakening (near-linear viscous rheology) at low strain rates was observed in association with the onset of dehydration to olivine. The enhancement of deformability is interpreted as due to the formation of thin, planar zones of ultrafine-grained but equiaxed (0.25 μm) olivine, which deform by diffusion-accommodated grain-boundary sliding. The experimental data therefore support the idea that a great deal of natural deformation during prograde metamorphism may occur in association with the transient existence of fine-grained reaction products, followed by grain growth and textural equilibration under essentially static conditions of relaxed stress.



1987 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 430-440 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. H. Chan ◽  
N. R. Morgenstern

A finite element analysis was performed of the deformations observed during the excavation of the Edmonton Convention Centre. Local geology in the Edmonton area consists of layers of shale with weak bentonite seams overlain by glacial deposits. The presence of the bentonite seams, which possess strain-softening characteristics, controls the stability of the excavation, which is located in a valley wall. To simulate the influence of the bentonite seams a strain-softening finite element model is used to estimate the amount of deformation in the foundation of the excavation. Field measurements indicated that localized progressive straining had occurred during the excavation process, and substantial heave of the foundation floor was observed. The finite element results show progressive deformation of the excavation and propagation of shear zones. Good agreement between the finite element results and the field observations is obtained. Key words: progressive failure, strain softening, finite element analysis, shear band, excavation stability.



2018 ◽  
Vol 470 (1) ◽  
pp. 173-204 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo D. Lima ◽  
Nicholas W. Hayman ◽  
Elena Miranda

AbstractRheological inheritance occurs when older metamorphic and deformational fabrics impact the mechanics of younger tectonic provinces, such as occurs in extensional provinces developed on sites of previous orogenesis. The Funeral and Black Mountains from the Death Valley region of the US Basin and Range provide the opportunity to study such rheological inheritance. The Funeral Mountains expose shear zones containing high-grade metamorphic fabrics and evidence for synkinematic, decompression-driven melt of Late Cretaceous, orogenic origin. Quartz <c>- and [a]-axes patterns from the shear zones correlate with high-temperature slip systems. The quartz microstructures were formed via grain-boundary migration, and these are overprinted by high-strain layers of mixed-phase aggregates that underwent grain boundary sliding. Reaction textures from the Funeral Mountains illustrate that much of the fabric development post-dates melting, but locally involved melt–rock reactions. In contrast with the Funeral Mountains, the basement complex in the Black Mountains preserves few peak-metamorphic textures, largely owing to the overprinting by Cenozoic magmatism and deformation. However, local relicts of high-grade deformational fabrics yielding Late Cretaceous-through-Eocene magmatic zircon ages are overprinted by greenschist grade fabrics. Using outcrop and microstructural (including electron backscatter diffraction) observations, and thermodynamic modelling, we detail how segregation of melt products during orogenic partial melting resulted in chemically isolated compositional domains, favouring localization via the formation of fine-grained retrograde fabrics. We propose a conceptual model that builds on our results wherein the heterogeneous distribution of peak, orogenic metamorphic phases and melt products governs lower crustal strength and fabric evolution during extension. The Wilson Cycle may be sensitive to rheological inheritance as the width of continental margins formed during rifting will be sensitive to the fabrics and compositions formed during collision.



2000 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 95-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael W. Hart

Abstract The occurrence of large translational paleolandslides in horizontally bedded sediments can not be completely explained by the presence of "weak" clay rocks and oversteepened natural slopes. When the shear strength of a landslide's basal rupture surface is back-calculated, residual shear strengths are usually required for failure. This is because peak shear strengths are too high to allow failure, even assuming the most conservative estimate of ground-water levels. Data obtained during geologic mapping and downhole logging of large-diameter borings suggest that the principal factor leading to translational landsliding within horizontally bedded sediments is the presence of a pre-existing shear zone. A new term, bedding-parallel shear zone (BPS), is proposed for these features. When shearing parallel to bedding results from folding or thrust faulting, it is tectonic in origin. When similar shearing is found in horizontally bedded sediments that have not been tectonically deformed, it is often misinterpreted as conclusive evidence of landsliding. Mechanisms that produce BPS are: 1. Elastic rebound. 2. Progressive failure of overconsolidated claystone. 3. Differential consolidation. 4. Gravitational creep. It is important for engineering geologists to recognize BPS and to have an understanding of the mechanisms responsible for their formation and relationship to translational landsliding. Knowledge of where and how BPS occur allows an understanding of why landslides have occurred in the past as well as allowing prediction of where large landslides are likely to occur in the future. Their misinterpretation as landslide slip surfaces has obvious effects on the accuracy of engineering geology studies and stability analyses. For example, a stability analysis for a typical landslide yielded a factor-of-safety of 1.2. An analysis of the same slope configuration representing a condition where a BPS is present, but not the entire landslide failure surface, yielded a factor-of-safety of 1.9.



2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sina Marti ◽  
Holger Stünitz ◽  
Renée Heilbronner ◽  
Oliver Plümper ◽  
Rüdiger Kilian

Abstract. While it is widely observed that mafic rocks are able to exeprience high strains by viscous flow, details on their rheology and deformation mechanisms are poorly constrained. Here, rock deformation experiments on four different, water-added plagioclase-pyroxene mixtures are presented: (i) plagioclase(An60-70) – clinopyroxene – orthopyroxene, (ii) plagioclase(An60) – diopside, (iii) plagioclase(An60) – enstatite and (iv) plagioclase(An01) – enstatite. Samples were deformed in general shear at strain rates of 3 × 10−5 to 3 × 10−6 s−1, 800 °C and confining pressure of 1.0 or 1.5 GPa. Results indicate that dissolution-precipitation creep (DPC) and grain boundary sliding (GBS) are the dominant deformation mechanisms. Coinciding with sample deformation, syn-kinematic mineral reactions yield abundant nucleation of new grains; the resulting intense grain size reduction is considered crucial for the activity of DPC and GBS. In high strain zones dominated by plagioclase, a weak, non-random and geometrically consistent crystallographic preferred orientation (CPO) is observed. Usually, a CPO is considered a consequence of dislocation creep, but the experiments presented here demonstrate that a CPO can develop during DPC and GBS. This study provides new evidence for the importance of DPC and GBS in mid-crustal shear zones within mafic rocks, which has important implications on understanding and modelling of mid-crustal rheology and flow.



2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Matthew P Hill

<p><b>Arrays of brittle-ductile shears exposed in the Southern Alps of New Zealand, haveprovided a superb natural laboratory for insight into the microstructural evolution of lowercrustal shear zones during exhumation. Shears are exposed in the central section of theSouthern Alps at Sam Peak, Chancellor Ridge, and Baumann Glacier in a zone ~2 kmwide that is located 6–8 km structurally above the Alpine Fault. An array ofsystematically spaced shear zones that formed by embrittlement and faulting ofquartzofeldspathic schist took place at the same time as ductile shearing of quartzcarbonateveins embedded within the schist. This study has used field-based structuralmapping along with optical microscopy and universal stage measurements ofcrystallographic preferred orientations (CPO) to resolve the shear zone kinematics andrheology. On the basis of these data, the strain path can be reconstructed for the shearedveins during their progressive deformation. This began with their incidence as backshearsat the base of the Alpine Fault ramp and ended with their subsequent recrystallisation,uplift, and exhumation.</b></p> <p>The near-vertical shear planes have mean orientation of 221@89 NW ± 1o (n =780). They are inferred to have formed as backshears accommodating uplift of the PacificPlate as it was translated onto the oblique footwall ramp of the Alpine Fault during lateCenozoic oblique convergence. Detailed fault offset transect surveys across the shears atChancellor Ridge and Baumann Glacier reveal a mean spacing between the shear zones of25 ± 5 cm (n = 410). Quartz-carbonate marker veins are displaced in a dextral west-sideupshear sense. Fault offset geometry and a consistent arrangement of mineral fibrelineations that decorate fault surfaces, indicate that the mean displacement vector pitches35o SW in the shear plane (trend and plunge of: 262, 35 ± 7o). Ductilely deformed markerveins have been subject to a mean displacement of 9.9 ± 1.4 cm (n = 344) and a meanfinite ductile shear strain of 4.8 ± 0.3 (n = 219). A strain-rate for the ductile deformationof the veins is estimated at 3 x 10-11 sec-1 based on the observed finite ductile shear strain,an escalator kinematic model, and assumptions about the width of the deforming zone.</p> <p>Five deformation phases have affected the sheared veins during their transport upthe fault ramp: 1) initial brittle faulting and ductile shearing; 2) grain boundary sliding ofmylonitic quartz in response to a post-ramping differential stress drop; 3) recrystallisationand grain growth; 4) renewed late-stage dislocation creep; and 5) semibrittle deformationand exhumation. In the schist, the shears initiated as planar brittle faults at lower crustal depths of~21 km at a temperature of 450 ± 50oC. They developed in a zone of transiently highshear strain-rates near the base of the Alpine Fault ramp. Dislocation creep caused a CPOof quartz and calcite to develop in sheared veins. Using the flow law of Hirth et al. (2001)and the estimated strain-rate, a differential stress of ~165 MPa is inferred for ductiledeformation of the veins. Near-lithostatic (λ = 0.85) fluid pressures would have causedthe rocks to undergo brittle failure, a situation that is confirmed by a late component ofbrittle deformation that over prints the ductilely sheared veins. Syntectonic quartz-calciteveins infill the shear fractures, and these themselves have been sheared. The deformationof the veins was not a simple shear process but one with triclinic flow symmetry. This isinferred from discordance between the shear direction and the near-vertical principleextension direction that is revealed by the pattern and symmetry of quartz and calcite CPOfabrics.</p> <p>After the shears move away from the ramp-step, grain boundary sliding (GBS)accommodated by solid-state diffusion creep is inferred to have affected quartz veins.</p> <p>This deformation mechanism takes place because of 1) the small 8 μm grain size inheritedfrom Phase 1; 2) the presence of fluid in the shear zone; and 3) a stress drop to ~22 MPathat followed the initial up-ramping. Quartz CPO fabrics in the sheared veins areremarkably weak considering their large shear strains. GBS is inferred to have been achief deformation mechanism that caused the weakening of quartz CPO fabrics in thehighly sheared sections of deformed veins. Calcite has also affected the quartz fabricstrength as those veins containing >5% calcite have very weak quartz CPO fabrics. Incontrast to quartz, the CPO fabrics for the co-existing calcite remained strong andcontinued to develop by dislocation creep.</p> <p>The third phase of deformation, a process that may have contributed to subsequentweakening of quartz CPO fabrics, was recrystallisation and grain growth to 126 μm and anequigranular-polygonal grain shape fabric. This fabric was overprinted by late-stagedislocation creep microstructures in the fourth deformation phase in response increaseddifferential stress encountered by the rocks at lower temperatures in the upper crust. Thefinal phase of deformation to affect the sheared veins was semibrittle deformation atdifferential stresses of <189 MPa and temperatures of 200–280oC as the rocks passedthrough the steady-state brittle-ductile transition zone at depths of 8–10 km before beingexhumed at the surface.</p>



2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sören Tholen ◽  
Jolien Linckens

&lt;p&gt;Small grain size and a well-mixed phase assemblage are key features of upper mantle (ultra)mylonitic layers. In those layers, Zener pinning inhibits grain growth, which could lead to diffusion creep. This increases the strain rate for a given stress significantly. Prerequisite is phase mixing which can occur by dynamic recrystallization (dynRXS) plus grain boundary sliding (GBS), metamorphic or melt/fluid-rock reactions, creep cavitation plus nucleation, or by a combination of those processes. In order to get insights into the interplay of phase mixing and dynRXS we investigate microfabrics (EBSD, optical microscopy) displaying the transition from clasts to mixed assemblages. Samples are taken from the Lanzo peridotite shear zone (Italy).&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Olivine dynamically recrystallizes from protomylonitic to ultramylonitic samples. Its grain size varies systematically between monomineralic (~20&amp;#181;m) and polymineralic layers&amp;#160;(~10&amp;#181;m). Olivine is the dominant mixing phase for both, dynamically recrystallizing orthopyroxene (ol~55vol.%) and clinopyroxene clasts (ol~45vol.%). In contrast, recrystallizing olivine clasts show little evidence of phase mixing. In phase mixtures, olivine neoblasts show weak (J-index ~1.8) C-Type and weak (J-Index ~1.5) B-type CPO&amp;#8217;s. Both types suggest the presence of water during deformation.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Isolated, equiaxial orthopyroxene clasts are present in all samples. DynRXS of opx starts in mylonites. Some clasts and tips of extensively elongated opx bands (max. axial ratios 1:50) are bordered by fine-grained (min. ECD~5&amp;#181;m) mixtures of olivine, opx &amp;#177;&amp;#160;anorthite/ cpx/ pargasite. Mixing intensities seem to depend on the connection to the olivine-rich matrix. Clast grain boundaries are highly lobate with indentations of secondary phases (mostly olivine). Opx neoblasts have no internal deformation and show large misorientations close to their host clast (misorientation angle &gt;45&amp;#176; at ~20&amp;#181;m distance). Their grain shape is either flat and elongated or equiaxial. Both shapes have lobate boundaries. Their CPO depends on the host clast orientation. In ultramylonites, opx bands disappeared completely.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Clinopyroxene porphyroclasts dynamically recrystallize in protomylonite to ultramylonite samples. Olivine is the dominant mixing phase (~45vol.%). Cpx mixed area grain sizes tend to be coarser (~10&amp;#181;m) than in corresponding opx areas (~6&amp;#181;m). Ultramylonitic cpx-ol assemblages have a higher mixing percentage (phase boundaries/grain boundaries ~70%) than mylonitic assemblages (~40%). In the mylonitic layers, clusters of cpx neoblasts form &amp;#8216;walls&amp;#8217; parallel to their host grain borders. Olivine neoblasts between these clusters show no CPO. The overall cpx CPO varies from [001] perpendicular and [010] parallel to the foliation with (J -Index ~2.5) to [100]&amp;#160;perpendicular and [001] parallel to the foliation (J-Index ~1.2).&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Beside few thoroughly mixed areas, bands of cpx+ol and of opx+ol are still distinguishable in ultramylonitic layers. This suggests their origin to be dynamically recrystallized opx and cpx clasts. Therefore, phase mixing is assumed to occur simultaneously to clast recrystallization. Beside a small gradient of opx/cpx abundance depending on the distance from their host clast there is little evidence for phase mixing by dynRXS+GBS only. High abundances of olivine neoblasts at grain boundaries of recrystallizing clasts and their instant mixed assemblage with host phase neoblasts suggest phase mixing being strongly dependent on olivine nucleation during dynRXS of opx and cpx.&lt;/p&gt;



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