Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4733500 Journal of Structural Geology 2010 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper reports a detailed characterization of an antigorite-bearing serpentinite, deformed at seismic slip-rate (1.1 m/s) in a high-velocity friction apparatus. Micro/nanostructural investigation of the slip zone (200 μm thick) revealed a zonal arrangement, with a close juxtaposition of horizons with significantly different strength, respectively consisting of amorphous to poorly-crystalline phases (with bulk anhydrous composition close to starting antigorite) and of highly-crystalline assemblages of forsterite and disordered enstatite (200 nm in size and in polygonal-like nanotextures). The slip zone also hosts micro/nanometre sized Cr-magnetite grains, aligned at low angle with respect to the slipping surface and inherited from the host serpentinite.Overall observations suggest that frictional heating at asperities on the slipping surface induced a temperature increase up to 820–1200 °C (in agreement with flash temperature theory), responsible for serpentine complete dehydration and amorphization, followed by crystallization of forsterite and enstatite (under post-deformation, static conditions). The results of this study may provide important keys for the full comprehension of the mechanical behaviour and of the possible geodynamical role of serpentinite-hosted faults through the seismic cycle.

Research highlights► High-velocity friction experiment on serpentinite. ► Nanoscale investigation of the ultrafine slip zone. ► Serpentine dehydration and decomposition. ► High-T static crystallization (forsterite + enstatite assemblage). ► Temperature constraints.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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