Displacement-length scaling of brittle faults in ductile shear

Author(s)
Bernhard Grasemann, Ulrike Exner, Cornelius Tschegg
Abstract

Within a low-grade ductile shear zone, we investigated exceptionally well exposed brittle faults, which accumulated antithetic slip and rotated into the shearing direction. The foliation planes of the mylonitic host rock intersect the faults approximately at their centre and exhibit ductile reverse drag. Three types of brittle faults can be distinguished: (i) Faults developing on pre-existing K-feldspar/mica veins that are oblique to the shear direction. These faults have triclinic flanking structures. (ii) Wing cracks opening as mode I fractures at the tips of the triclinic flanking structures, perpendicular to the shear direction. These cracks are reactivated as faults with antithetic shear, extend from the parent K-feldspar/mica veins and form a complex linked flanking structure system. (iii) Joints forming perpendicular to the shearing direction are deformed to form monoclinic flanking structures. Triclinic and monoclinic flanking structures record elliptical displacement-distance profiles with steep displacement gradients at the fault tips by ductile flow in the host rocks, resulting in reverse drag of the foliation planes. These structures record one of the greatest maximum displacement/length ratios reported from natural fault structures. These exceptionally high ratios can be explained by localized antithetic displacement along brittle slip surfaces, which did not propagate during their rotation during surrounding ductile flow.

Organisation(s)
Department of Geology, Department of Lithospheric Research
Journal
Journal of Structural Geology
Volume
33
Pages
1650-1661
No. of pages
12
ISSN
0191-8141
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsg.2011.08.008
Publication date
2011
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
105101 General geology
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/3db394f6-33bd-4fd6-93a0-6696ff3254bf