Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5781477 Tectonophysics 2017 72 Pages PDF
Abstract
We interpret the fault gouge ages to date growth of newly formed illite during gouge formation at temperatures of ~ 300-350 °C towards the base of the seismogenic zone. Simple backcalculation using current uplift/exhumation and convergence rates, and dip angles of 45-60° at the Alpine Fault support that interpretation. We infer that the fault gouge ages record faulting and gouge formation as the rocks passed very rapidly through the brittle-ductile transition zone on their way to the surface. Rb-Sr and 40Ar/39Ar ages on muscovite from Alpine Schist mylonite date muscovite growth at ~ 11 Ma together with a younger phase of cooling/shearing at ~ 1.5-2 Ma. Our ages from the Alpine Schist indicate extremely rapid cooling exceeding 200 °C/Ma. The fault gouge age from the Two Thumbs Fault is significantly too old to have formed as part of the late Neogene/Quaternary Southern Alps evolution.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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