4.7 Article

Tectonic pressure gradients during viscous creep drive fluid flow and brittle failure at the base of the seismogenic zone

Journal

GEOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 10, Pages 1255-1259

Publisher

GEOLOGICAL SOC AMER, INC
DOI: 10.1130/G49012.1

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Funding

  1. EU [618289]
  2. European Research Council [715836]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [715836] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The study provides insights into the stress conditions and geological environments of fluid-pressure cycling through detailed structural investigation of a vein-bearing shear zone in Sagelvvatn, northern Norwegian Caledonides.
Fluid-pressure cycles are commonly invoked to explain alternating frictional and viscous deformation at the base of the seismogenic crust. However, the stress conditions and geological environment of fluid-pressure cycling are unclear. We address this problem by detailed structural investigation of a vein-bearing shear zone at Sagelvvatn, northern Norwegian Caledonides. In this dominantly viscous shear zone, synkinematic quartz veins locally crosscut mylonitic fabric at a high angle and are rotated and folded with the same sense of shear as the mylonite. Chlorite thermometry indicates that both veining and mylonitization occurred at similar to 315-400 degrees C. The vein-filled fractures are interpreted as episodically triggered by viscous creep in the mylonite, where quartz piezometry and brittle failure modes are consistent with low (18-44 MPa) differential stress. The Sagelvvatn shear zone is a stretching shear zone, where elevated pressure drives a hydraulic gradient that expels fluids from the shear zone to the host rocks. In low-permeability shear zones, this hydraulic gradient facilitates buildup of pore-fluid pressure until the hydrofracture criterion is reached and tensile fractures open. We propose that hydraulic gradients established by local and cyclic pressure variations during viscous creep can drive episodic fluid escape and result in brittle-viscous fault slip at the base of the seismogenic crust.

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