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Home Publications Mid-crustal Shear Zone Formation In Granitic Rocks: Constraints From Quantitative Textural And Crystallographic Preferred Orientations Analyses

Mid-crustal shear zone formation in granitic rocks: Constraints from quantitative textural and crystallographic preferred orientations analyses

Publication Type Journal Article
Author Emilien Oliot, Philippe Goncalves, Karel Schulmann, Didier Marquer, Ondrej Lexa
Year of Publication 2014
Journal Tectonophysics
Volume 612
Number of Pages 63-80
Date Published 2014/FEB 4 2014/
ISBN Number 0040-1951; 1879-3266
URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2013.11.032
Abstract

This paper presents quantitative microstructural and crystallographic preferred orientation (CPO) analyses of an Alpine amphibolite facies shear zone developed in the Fibbia metagranite (Gotthard massif, Central Alps). The weakly deformed metagranite and orthogneiss at the margins of the shear zone are characterized by a bulk strain partitioning between harder coarse-grained monomineralic aggregates, derived from quartz and K-feldspar porphyroclasts, and softer fine-grained plagioclase-bearing shear bands. A characteristic feature is a dilatant fracturing of strong quartz and feldspar aggregates. CPOs and microtextures suggest that quartz and K-feldspar aggregates are dynamically recrystallized via dislocation creep while plagioclases show evidences of fluid-assisted diffusive mass transfer and grain boundary sliding. In the mylonite and ultramylonite shear zone core, the porphyroclastsderived quartz and K-feldspar layers are broken-down to produce a polyphased matrix that is characterized by a homogeneous micron-scale grain size and regular/random distribution. Here, the deformation of the whole aggregate occurs via a fluid-assisted dissolution-precipitation creep and grain boundary sliding, referred as a fluid-assisted granular flow. We propose a model of shear zone formation associated with the nucleation of shear zone followed by lateral widening of the sheared domain. The lateral broadening of the shear zone is driven by (1) the increase in fluid pressure in permeable albite-oligoclase shear bands that results in expulsion of fluids to the shear zone margins and hydraulic fracturing of strong aggregates, and (2) the thermodynamic re-equilibration via metasomatic reactions of the shear zone walls. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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