4.5 Article

A pseudotachylyte geothermometer

Journal

JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 9, Pages 1345-1357

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0191-8141(01)00008-6

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Pseudotachylytes invariably contain a conspicuous concentration of clasts and lithic fragments in their matrices, which reflect brittle wear processes during frictional melting. The ratio of clasts to matrix is interpreted as the ratio of wear to melt (W/M) and measurements of this ratio show a range of 0.1-0.7. Based on models of melting and wear processes it is shown that the ratio W/M is independent of fault displacement, stress, fault area and mineralogy. Thermodynamic considerations indicate that W/M corresponds to the thermodynamic efficiency of the conversion of work to heat and is defined as w/q = (T-high - T-low)/T-high where Thigh refers to the melt temperature and T-low is the ambient country rock temperature. This provides a simple new technique for estimating the ambient crustal temperature T-crust in degrees Kelvin T-crust = (1 - W/M)T-melt. Assuming a reasonable value for the temperature of the melt, estimates of country rock temperatures T-crust for pseudotachylytes from four different localities in the USA indicate a range of 123-387 degreesC. Eclogite-facies pseudotachylytes from western Norway yield a mean country rock temperature of 658 degreesC, in good agreement with independent Fe-Mg exchange geothermometry. This new geothermometer appears to be applicable throughout the entice crust and may provide a better understanding of melting and wear processes during seismic faulting. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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