Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8914419 | Journal of Structural Geology | 2018 | 15 Pages |
Abstract
Exhumed fault rock of the central Alpine Fault Zone (South Island, New Zealand) shows extensive clay mineralization, and it has been the focus of recent research that aims to describe the evolution and frictional behavior of the fault. Using Quantitative X-ray powder diffraction, 40Ar/39Ar geochronology, hydrogen isotope (δD) geochemistry, and electron microbeam analysis, we constrain the thermal and fluid conditions of deformation that produced two predominant clay phases ubiquitous to the exposed fault damage zone, illite and chlorite. Illite polytype analysis indicates that most end-member illite and chlorite material formed in equilibrium with meteoric fluid (δDâ¯=â¯â55 to â75â°), but two locations preserve a metamorphic origin of chlorite (δDâ¯=â¯â36 to â45â°). Chlorite chemical geothermometry constrains crystal growth to Tâ¯=â¯210-296â¯Â°C. Isotopic analysis also constrains illite growth to Tâ¯<â¯100â¯Â°C, consistent with the mineralogy, with Ar ages <0.5 Ma. High geothermal gradients in the study area promoted widespread, near-surface mineralization, and limited the window of clay authigenesis in the Alpine Fault Zone to <5â¯km for chlorite and <2â¯km for illite. This implies a significant contrast between fault rock exposed at the surface and that at depth, and informs discussions about fault strength, clays and frictional behavior.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Austin Boles, Andreas Mulch, Ben van der Pluijm,