4.5 Article

Using microstructures and TitaniQ thermobarometry of quartz sheared around garnet porphyroclasts to evaluate microstructural evolution and constrain an Alpine Fault Zone geotherm

Journal

JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY
Volume 75, Issue -, Pages 17-31

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsg.2015.02.012

Keywords

Alpine Fault Zone; Porphyroclasts; Quartz; Microstructures; TitaniQ; Geotherm

Funding

  1. New Zealand Marsden Fund grant [UOO1116]
  2. University of Otago Doctoral Scholarship
  3. National Science Foundation [1064805]
  4. Office Of The Director
  5. Office Of Internatl Science &Engineering [1064805] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Interpretations of deformation processes within ductile shear zones are often based on the characterisation of microstructures preserved in exhumed rocks. However, exhumed microstructures provide only a snapshot of the closing stages of deformation and we need ways of understanding how microstructures change through time and at what rate this occurs. To address this problem, we study optical microstructures and electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) data from samples of quartz layers deflected around garnet porphyroclasts (which generate local stress and strain rate perturbations) during mylonitic deformation in the Alpine Fault Zone of New Zealand. During shearing around rigid garnet porphyroclasts, quartz undergoes grain size reduction in response to locally increased stresses, while c-axes reveal increasing components of rhomb < a > and prism < a > slip, reflecting a local increase in shear strain and strain rate. TitaniQ thermobarometry and quartz microstructures suggest a rather narrow range of recorded quartz deformation temperatures around 450 -500 degrees C, which we propose reflects the cessation of grain boundary migration driven deformation. Given that temperatures well above the brittle ductile transition for quartz (similar to 350 degrees C) are preserved, we anticipate that rapid cooling and exhumation must have occurred from the 500 degrees C isotherm. Ultimately, we propose a modified geotherm for the central Alpine Fault Zone hanging wall, which raises the 500 degrees C isotherm to 11 km depth, near the brittle ductile transition. Our updated Alpine Fault Zone geotherm implies a hotter and weaker middle to lower crust than previously proposed. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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