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Keywords = crustal rheology

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17 pages, 26337 KiB  
Article
A Simple Scenario for Explaining Asymmetric Deformation Across the Altyn Tagh Fault in the Northern Tibetan Plateau: Contributions from Multiple Faults
by Yi Luo, Hongbo Jiang, Wanpeng Feng, Yunfeng Tian and Wenliang Jiang
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(7), 1277; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17071277 - 3 Apr 2025
Viewed by 349
Abstract
Asymmetric deformation has been observed along the Altyn Tagh Fault (ATF), the northern boundary of the Tibetan Plateau. Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain this asymmetry, including contrasts in crustal strength, lower crust/upper mantle rheology, deep fault dislocation shifts, and dipping fault [...] Read more.
Asymmetric deformation has been observed along the Altyn Tagh Fault (ATF), the northern boundary of the Tibetan Plateau. Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain this asymmetry, including contrasts in crustal strength, lower crust/upper mantle rheology, deep fault dislocation shifts, and dipping fault geometry; however, the real scenario remains debated. This study utilizes a time series Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) technique to investigate spatially variable asymmetries across the western section of the ATF (83–89°E). We generated a high-resolution three-dimensional (3D) crustal velocity field from Sentinel-1 data for the northwestern Tibetan Plateau (~82–92°E; 33–40°N). Our results confirm that pronounced greater deformations within the Tibetan Plateau occur only along the westernmost section of the ATF (83–85.5°E). We propose this asymmetry is primarily driven by a splay fault system within a transition zone, bounded by the ATF in the north and the Margai Caka Fault (MCF)–Kunlun Fault (KLF) in the south, which accommodates an east–west extension in the central Tibetan Plateau while transferring sinistral shear to the KLF. The concentrated strain observed along the ATF and MCF–KLF lends more support to a block-style eastward extrusion model, rather than a continuously deforming model, for Tibetan crustal kinematics. Full article
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19 pages, 15362 KiB  
Article
Deep Tectonic Environment Analysis of the Lingshan Conjugate Earthquake within the Qinzhou Fold Belt, South China: Insights Derived from 3D Resistivity Structure Model
by Chunheng Yan, Bin Zhou, Yan Zhan, Xiangyu Sun, Sha Li, Lei Li and Peilan Guo
Remote Sens. 2024, 16(19), 3740; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16193740 - 9 Oct 2024
Viewed by 1676
Abstract
The Qinzhou fold belt, situated at the contact zone between the Yangtze and Cathaysia blocks in South China, was affected by the 1936 Lingshan M6¾ earthquake and the 1958 Lingshan M5¾ earthquake, both of which occurred within the conjugate structure. Understanding the deep [...] Read more.
The Qinzhou fold belt, situated at the contact zone between the Yangtze and Cathaysia blocks in South China, was affected by the 1936 Lingshan M6¾ earthquake and the 1958 Lingshan M5¾ earthquake, both of which occurred within the conjugate structure. Understanding the deep seismogenic setting and causal mechanism of the Lingshan conjugate earthquake is of great significance for assessing the seismic disaster risk in the region. In this study, we utilized 237 magnetotelluric datasets and employed three-dimensional electromagnetic inversion to characterize the deep-seated three-dimensional resistivity structure of the Qinzhou fold belt and the Lingshan seismic zone. The results reveal that: (1) The NE-trending faults within the Qinzhou fold belt and adjacent areas are classified as trans-crustal faults. The faults exhibit crust-mantle ductile shear zones in their deeper sections, which are essential in governing regional tectonic deformation and seismic activity; (2) The electrical structure of the Qinzhou fold belt is in line with the tectonic characteristics of a composite orogenic belt, having experienced several phases of tectonic modification. The southeastern region is being influenced by mantle-derived magmatic activities originating from the Leiqiong area over a significant distance; (3) In the Lingshan seismic zone, the NE-trending Fangcheng-Lingshan fault is a trans-crustal fault and the NW-trending Zhaixu fault is an intra-crustal fault. The electrical structure pattern “two low, one high” in the zone has a significant impact on the deep tectonic framework of the area and influences the deformation behavior of shallow faults; and (4) The seismogenic structure of the 1936 Lingshan M6¾ earthquake was the Fangcheng-Lingshan fault. The earthquake’s genesis was influenced by the coupling effect of tectonic stress and deep thermal dynamics. The seismogenic structure of the 1958 Lingshan M5¾ earthquake was the Zhaixu fault. The earthquake’s genesis was influenced by tectonic stress and static stress triggering from the 1936 Lingshan M6¾ earthquake. The conjugate rupture mode in the Lingshan seismic zone is influenced by various factors, including differences in physical properties, rheology of deep materials, and the scale and depth of fault development. Full article
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33 pages, 25776 KiB  
Article
Mass-Transfer and Fluid Flow along Extensional Detachment Faults in Hyperextended Rift Systems: The Examples of Tasna in the Alps, Mauléon in the Pyrenees, and Hobby High Offshore Iberia
by Victor Hugo Guimarães Pinto, Gianreto Manatschal, Anne Marie Karpoff, Emmanuel Masini, Rodolfo Araújo Victor, Adriano Roessler Viana and Marc Ulrich
Geosciences 2023, 13(12), 374; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences13120374 - 8 Dec 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2595
Abstract
Hyperextended rift systems are characterized by extreme crustal thinning and mantle exhumation associated with extensional detachment faults. These faults cut through thinned continental crust, reaching the underlying mantle and allowing for seawater to infiltrate and react with the crustal and mantle rocks. Hydrothermal [...] Read more.
Hyperextended rift systems are characterized by extreme crustal thinning and mantle exhumation associated with extensional detachment faults. These faults cut through thinned continental crust, reaching the underlying mantle and allowing for seawater to infiltrate and react with the crustal and mantle rocks. Hydrothermal fluid systems linked to detachment faults result in fluid–rock reactions occurring along the detachments, resulting in the breakdown and alteration of minerals, loss of elements and strain weakening in both mantle and crustal rocks. We present new geological observations and geochemical data from the modern Iberia and fossil Alpine Tethys Ocean Continent Transition and the West Pyrenean Mauléon hyperextended rift basin. We show evidence for a km-scale fluid flow along detachment faults and discuss the conditions under which fluid flow and mass transfer occurred. Convective fluid systems are of major importance for mass transfer between the mantle, crustal and marine reservoirs. We identified gains in Si, Mg, Fe, Mn, Ca, Ni, Cr and V along extensional detachment faults that we relate to channelized, hydrothermal crust- and mantle-reacted fluid systems migrating along detachments in the hyperextended continental crust. The observation that fault rocks of extensional detachment and syn-extensional sedimentary rocks are enriched in mantle-derived elements such as Cr, Ni and V enables us to define the pathways of fluids, as well as to estimate their age relative to detachment faulting and sedimentation. Because all three examples show a similar mass transport of elements along detachment systems at km-scale, we conclude that these examples are linked to convective fluid systems that may affect the thermal state of the lithosphere, as well as the rheology and chemistry of rocks in hyperextended systems, and may have implications for ore mineral exploration in hyperextended rift systems. Full article
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22 pages, 10509 KiB  
Article
Differential Fluid Activity in a Single Exhumed Continental Subduction Unit from Local P-T-M(H2O) Records of Zoned Amphiboles (North Muya, Eastern Siberia)
by Sergei Y. Skuzovatov
Minerals 2022, 12(2), 217; https://doi.org/10.3390/min12020217 - 8 Feb 2022
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 1844
Abstract
The behavior of the continental lithosphere in the Alpine-type subduction zones, which primarily depends on its thickness, thermal regime of subduction and availability of fluids/melts, remains an important issue for both metamorphic petrology and geochemistry as well as for resolving the thermomechanical properties [...] Read more.
The behavior of the continental lithosphere in the Alpine-type subduction zones, which primarily depends on its thickness, thermal regime of subduction and availability of fluids/melts, remains an important issue for both metamorphic petrology and geochemistry as well as for resolving the thermomechanical properties of subduction paleo-interfaces. Rehydrated (amphibole- and zoisite-bearing) eclogites from the Neoproterozoic North Muya high-pressure complex (northern Central Asian Orogenic belt, eastern Siberia) were studied in order to assess their peak burial depths, degree of prograde dehydration, and further retrograde hydration extent within a subducted and exhumed continental unit. Three medium-grained eclogites from different localities of HP complex show similarly dry peak assemblages of pyrope-almandine-grossular garnet (XGrs up to 0.30, XPrp up to 0.25) + Na-rich omphacite (up to 44 mol % of jadeite) + rutile + quartz, which are variably replaced by secondary plagioclase + clinopyroxene ± amphibole symplectitic aggregate. The eclogites were subjected to burial at similar peak depths (up to ~17–21 kbar) but different peak temperatures (within ~600–730 °C) with or without notable heating and re-equilibration due to crustal thickening. Variable degrees of exhumation-induced pervasive rehydration led to growth of individual zoned porphyroblastic barroisite-hornblende amphibole ([B]Na = 0.03–0.45) ± zoisite over the primary eclogitic assemblage or after notable thermally-driven development of symplectitic aggregate after omphacite. Amphibole compositions together with the zoisite presence/absence in different samples reflect continuous rehydration by addition of ~0.5–1.5 wt.% at different exhumation conditions, from nearly peak eclogitic P–T (~17–21 kbar) to granulite- and amphibolite-facies depths within the plagioclase stability field (<14 kbar). This diversity most likely required irregular distribution of internally sourced, low-volume, hydrous metamorphic fluid (i.e., from host felsic rocks or metasediments) acting at different depths of the subduction interface. From the performed PTX calculations, I suggest that nearly isochemical (i.e., without any significant modification of the bulk-rock composition other than incorporation of additional H2O), retrograde hydration by only at lower- to middle-crust conditions did not significantly influence the density and the rheology of the subducted continental slices due to both (1) a limited abundance of dense metabasic rocks, which are commonly more fluid-rich (e.g., due to chlorite or amphibole alteration), and (2) the initially dry nature of mafic and felsic continental rocks. The limited dehydration and rehydration scales exemplified by the North Muya eclogites and therefore low availability of hydrous metamorphic fluids may have accounted for the high buoyancy of the eclogitic crust and explained the absence of contemporaneous suprasubduction magmatism in the regional context at ca. ~630 Ma. Full article
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19 pages, 5388 KiB  
Article
Extensive Sills in the Continental Basement from Deep Seismic Reflection Profiling
by Larry D. Brown and Doyeon Kim
Geosciences 2020, 10(11), 449; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences10110449 - 10 Nov 2020
Cited by 12 | Viewed by 4009
Abstract
Crustal seismic reflection profiling has revealed the presence of extensive, coherent reflections with anomalously high amplitudes in the crystalline crust at a number of locations around the world. In areas of active tectonic activity, these seismic “bright spots” have often been interpreted as [...] Read more.
Crustal seismic reflection profiling has revealed the presence of extensive, coherent reflections with anomalously high amplitudes in the crystalline crust at a number of locations around the world. In areas of active tectonic activity, these seismic “bright spots” have often been interpreted as fluid magma at depth. The focus in this report is high-amplitude reflections that have been identified or inferred to mark interfaces between solid mafic intrusions and felsic to intermediate country rock. These “frozen sills” most commonly appear as thin, subhorizontal sheets at middle to upper crustal depths, several of which can be traced for tens to hundreds of kilometers. Their frequency among seismic profiles suggest that they may be more common than widely realized. These intrusions constrain crustal rheology at the time of their emplacement, represent a significant mode of transfer of mantle material and heat into the crust, and some may constitute fingerprints of distant mantle plumes. These sills may have played important roles in overlying basin evolution and ore deposition. Full article
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18 pages, 17494 KiB  
Article
Global Glacial Isostatic Adjustment Constrained by GPS Measurements: Spherical Harmonic Analyses of Uplifts and Geopotential Variations
by Yan Zhou, Shaomin Yang, Jiesi Luo, Jim Ray, Yong Huang and Jiancheng Li
Remote Sens. 2020, 12(7), 1209; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12071209 - 9 Apr 2020
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 4664
Abstract
In addition to studies of sea level change and mantle rheology, reliable Glacial Isostatic Adjustment (GIA) models are necessary as a background model to correct the widely used Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) monthly gravity solutions to determine subsecular, nonviscous variations. Based [...] Read more.
In addition to studies of sea level change and mantle rheology, reliable Glacial Isostatic Adjustment (GIA) models are necessary as a background model to correct the widely used Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) monthly gravity solutions to determine subsecular, nonviscous variations. Based on spherical harmonic analyses, we developed a method using degree-dependent weighting to assimilate the Global Positioning System (GPS) derived crustal uplift rates into GIA model predictions, in which the good global pattern of GIA model predictions and better local resolution of GPS solutions are both retained. Some systematic errors in global GPS uplift rates were also corrected during the spherical harmonic analyses. Further, we used the refined GIA uplift rates to infer the GIA-induced rates of Stokes coefficients (complete to degree/order 120) relying on the accurate relationship between GIA vertical surface deformation and gravitational potential changes. The results show notable improvements relative to GIA model outputs, and may serve as a GIA-correction model for GRACE time-variable gravity data. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental Remote Sensing)
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27 pages, 18055 KiB  
Article
Partial Melting and Crustal Deformation during the Early Paleozoic Wuyi–Yunkai Orogeny: Insights from Zircon U-Pb Geochronology and Structural Analysis of the Fuhuling Migmatites in the Yunkai Region, South China
by Junhao Zhang, Weiliang Liu, Chris Yakymchuk, Rina Sa, Zhen Zeng, Ruxin Ding, Gongjian Tang, Hanqi Liu, Qingyan Xu and Yong Wang
Minerals 2019, 9(10), 621; https://doi.org/10.3390/min9100621 - 9 Oct 2019
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 4673
Abstract
Migmatites record crucial information about the rheology and tectonothermal evolutionof the deep crust during orogenesis. In the Wuyi–Yunkai orogen in South China, migmatites at Fuhuling record Early Paleozoic high temperatures and associated partial melting. However, the absolute timing and implications for the rheology [...] Read more.
Migmatites record crucial information about the rheology and tectonothermal evolutionof the deep crust during orogenesis. In the Wuyi–Yunkai orogen in South China, migmatites at Fuhuling record Early Paleozoic high temperatures and associated partial melting. However, the absolute timing and implications for the rheology of the deep crust during orogenesis are poorly constrained. In this contribution, we used spatial analysis of migmatitic leucosomes, structural analysis, and U-Pb geochronology of zircon to elucidate the absolute timing of crustal partial melting, the degree of partial melting, and the role of partial melting on the rheology of the crust during the Wuyi–Yunkai orogeny. Partial melting of the Fuhuling migmatites occurred at c. 440 Ma during Early Paleozoic Wuyi–Yunkai orogenesis. Subsequent lower temperature metamorphism associated with Indosinian movement that caused minor zircon recrystallization was temporally associated with the crystallization of nearby biotite monzogranites, but it did not influence the morphology of the Fuhuling migmatites. The migmatites preserve a morphological transition from metatexite to diatexite with an increasing proportion of leucosome. This transition preserves different structural characteristics that represent the response of the solid framework and melt network to variable melt fractions during partial melting. The large proportion of in situ or in source leucosome in the Fuhuling migmatites suggests that it was a melt-rich crustal horizon during orogenesis, and that a substantial proportion of anatectic melt was retained in the deep crust. The rheological transition documented in the Fuhuling migmatites was caused by changes in the melt fraction, and it is an analogue for the rheological transition characteristics of melt-rich crustal horizons in the Yunkai region during Early Paleozoic Wuyi–Yunkai orogenesis and subsequent orogenic collapse. Full article
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25 pages, 3962 KiB  
Review
Nanocrystalline Principal Slip Zones and Their Role in Controlling Crustal Fault Rheology
by Berend A. Verberne, Oliver Plümper and Christopher J. Spiers
Minerals 2019, 9(6), 328; https://doi.org/10.3390/min9060328 - 28 May 2019
Cited by 16 | Viewed by 6121
Abstract
Principal slip zones (PSZs) are narrow (<10 cm) bands of localized shear deformation that occur in the cores of upper-crustal fault zones where they accommodate the bulk of fault displacement. Natural and experimentally-formed PSZs consistently show the presence of nanocrystallites in the <100 [...] Read more.
Principal slip zones (PSZs) are narrow (<10 cm) bands of localized shear deformation that occur in the cores of upper-crustal fault zones where they accommodate the bulk of fault displacement. Natural and experimentally-formed PSZs consistently show the presence of nanocrystallites in the <100 nm size range. Despite the presumed importance of such nanocrystalline (NC) fault rock in controlling fault mechanical behavior, their prevalence and potential role in controlling natural earthquake cycles remains insufficiently investigated. In this contribution, we summarize the physical properties of NC materials that may have a profound effect on fault rheology, and we review the structural characteristics of NC PSZs observed in natural faults and in experiments. Numerous literature reports show that such zones form in a wide range of faulted rock types, under a wide range of conditions pertaining to seismic and a-seismic upper-crustal fault slip, and frequently show an internal crystallographic preferred orientation (CPO) and partial amorphization, as well as forming glossy or “mirror-like” slip surfaces. Given the widespread occurrence of NC PSZs in upper-crustal faults, we suggest that they are of general significance. Specifically, the generally high rates of (diffusion) creep in NC fault rock may play a key role in controlling the depth limits to the seismogenic zone. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Nanomineralogy)
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21 pages, 5841 KiB  
Article
Far-Field Deformation Resulting from Rheologic Differences Interacting with Tectonic Stresses: An Example from the Pacific/Australian Plate Boundary in Southern New Zealand
by Phaedra Upton, Dave Craw and Rachel Walcott
Geosciences 2014, 4(3), 93-113; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences4030093 - 10 Jul 2014
Cited by 16 | Viewed by 11119
Abstract
The Miocene in Southern New Zealand was dominated by strike-slip tectonics. Stratigraphic evidence from this time attests to two zones of subsidence in the south: (a) a middle Cenozoic pull-apart basin and (b) a regionally extensive subsiding lake complex, which developed east and [...] Read more.
The Miocene in Southern New Zealand was dominated by strike-slip tectonics. Stratigraphic evidence from this time attests to two zones of subsidence in the south: (a) a middle Cenozoic pull-apart basin and (b) a regionally extensive subsiding lake complex, which developed east and distal to the developing plate boundary structure. The lake overlay a block of crust with a significantly weak mid-crustal section and we pose the question: can rheological transitions at an angle to a plate boundary produce distal subsidence and/or uplift? We use stratigraphic, structural and geophysical observations from Southern New Zealand to constrain three-dimensional numerical models for a variety of boundary conditions and rheological scenarios. We show that coincident subsidence and uplift can result from purely strike-slip boundary conditions interacting with a transition from strong to weak to strong mid-crustal rheology. The resulting pattern of vertical displacement is a function of the symmetry or asymmetry of the boundary conditions and the extent and orientation of the rheological transitions. For the Southern New Zealand case study, subsidence rates of ~0.1 mm/yr are predicted for a relative plate motion of 25 mm/yr, leading to ~500 m of subsidence over a 5 Ma time period, comparable to the thickness of preserved lacustrine sediments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Geological Mapping and Modeling of Earth Architectures)
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