4.7 Article

Blueschist-facies paleo-earthquakes in a serpentinite channel (Zagros suture, Iran) enlighten seismogenesis in Mariana-type subduction margins

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 573, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2021.117135

Keywords

Mariana-type margins; blueschists; earthquakes; paleo-earthquakes; ultracataclasites; Zagros suture

Funding

  1. Initiative D'EXcellence (IDEX) [16C538]
  2. TelluS Program of CNRS/INSU
  3. University of Granada at CIC

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The study reveals the presence of fault-related blueschist-facies rocks in a serpentinite melange in the Zagros suture, highlighting similarities with the Mariana subduction zone. This new finding sheds light on the physical nature and mechanical processes operating within fluid-saturated fault zones in the serpentinized subduction channel.
The architecture and pressure-temperature conditions reached by a Cretaceous block-in-matrix serpentinite melange exposed in the Zagros suture resemble those imaged in the active Mariana subduction zone. There, large magnitude-earthquakes (M-w> 9) have never been recorded but smaller events - of poorly-constrained physical origin - in the range M-w similar to 3-6 are widespread. Field and petro-structural constraints led to a first report of blueschist-facies seismic fault-related rocks in the Zagros serpentinite melange, including breccias, foliated cataclasites and ultracataclasites; all observed within a foliated mafic metatuffaceous block embedded in serpentinite schists. Fine-scale petrological characterization of ultrafine-grained, fluidized cataclastic material reveals the presence of newly-formed glaucophane, lawsonite, phengite, albite and pumpellyite, an assemblage inferred (based on thermodynamic modelling) to have crystallized in the lower lawsonite-blueschist facies at similar to 0.6-1.0 GPa and 230-300 degrees C. Extensional veins containing similar mineral assemblages are observed crosscutting the aforementioned rocks but are also identified as comminuted fragments in all fault-related lithologies. Crosscutting relationships among the multiple generations of fluidized ultracataclasites and brecciated blueschists suggest that episodic faulting and hydrofracturing were contemporaneous processes at similar to 20-35 km depth, i.e., at similar conditions as reported for metabasalts expelled by Mariana serpentinite mud volcanoes. Mechanical modelling confirms that the studied fault-related features can only have formed under nearly lithostatic pore fluid pressure conditions, maintaining the system in a critically unstable regime that promoted recurrent seismic faulting, as monitored in the Mariana seismogenic zone. These fluids are likely associated with externally and deeply-generated fluid pulses that may have reached the seismogenic window, imprinting a Ta-Th-Nb-HREEs-enriched trace element signature. This new faulted blueschist occurrence highlights the physical nature and the mechanical processes operating within fluid-saturated fault zones in the serpentinized subduction channel. (C) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V.

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