Abstract
Abstract. We studied by Electron BackScatter Diffraction (EBSD) and optical microscopy a coarse-grained (ca. 0.5–6 mm) quartz vein embedded in a phyllonitic matrix to gain insights into the recrystallization mechanisms and the processes of strain localization in quartz deformed under lower greenschist facies conditions, broadly coincident with the brittle–viscous transition. The vein deformed during faulting along a phyllonitic thrust of Caledonian age within the Porsa Imbricate Stack in the Paleoproterozoic Repparfjord Tectonic Window in northern Norway. The phyllonite hosting the vein formed at the expense of a metabasaltic protolith through feldspar breakdown to form interconnected layers of fine, synkinematic phyllosilicates. In the mechanically weak framework of the phyllonite, the quartz vein acted as a relatively rigid body. Viscous deformation in the vein was initially accommodated by quartz basal slip. Under the prevailing deformation conditions, however, dislocation glide- and possibly creep-accommodated deformation of quartz was inefficient, and this resulted in localized strain hardening. In response to the (1) hardening, (2) progressive and cyclic increase of the fluid pressure, and (3) increasing competence contrast between the vein and the weakly foliated host phyllonite, vein quartz crystals began to deform by brittle processes along specific, suitably oriented lattice planes, creating microgouges along microfractures. Nucleated new grains rapidly sealed these fractures as fluids penetrated the actively deforming system. The grains grew initially by solution precipitation and later by grain boundary migration. We suggest that the different initial orientation of the vein crystals led to strain accommodation by different mechanisms in the individual crystals, generating remarkably different microstructures. Crystals suitably oriented for basal slip, for example, accommodated strain mainly viscously and experienced only minor fracturing. Instead, crystals misoriented for basal slip hardened and deformed predominantly by domainal fracturing. This study indicates the importance of considering shear zones as dynamic systems wherein the activated deformation mechanisms may vary through time in response to the complex temporal and spatial evolution of the shear zone, often in a cyclic fashion.
Highlights
Deformation of quartz at low-grade metamorphic conditions has been the subject of a vast number of microstructural studies aiming to unravel the mechanisms that control strain accommodation therein and to derive parameters of general validity for the rheology of quartz-rich systems at shallow to mid crustal levels (e.g., Trepmann and Stöckhert, 2009; Stipp et al, 2002; Menegon et al, 2008; Holyoke and Tullis, 2006; Dell’Angelo and Tullis, 1996; Hirth and Tullis, 1992; Stipp and Kunze, 2008; Hirth and Beeler, 2015)
The studied sample is from a quartz vein and its host rock at an outcrop, where the main Nussirjávri Fault Zone (NFZ) foliation developed at the expense of metabasalt
Viscous deformation was interrupted by transient episodes of embrittlement, which we relate to both the crystallographic framework inherited from the statically crystallized vein and the oscillations of the pressure of the fluid phase that was present during continued deformation related to the thrusting history along the NFZ
Summary
Deformation of quartz at low-grade metamorphic conditions has been the subject of a vast number of microstructural studies aiming to unravel the mechanisms that control strain accommodation therein and to derive parameters of general validity for the rheology of quartz-rich systems at shallow to mid crustal levels (e.g., Trepmann and Stöckhert, 2009; Stipp et al, 2002; Menegon et al, 2008; Holyoke and Tullis, 2006; Dell’Angelo and Tullis, 1996; Hirth and Tullis, 1992; Stipp and Kunze, 2008; Hirth and Beeler, 2015). Kjøll et al.: Deformation of vein quartz under fluid-rich lower greenschist facies conditions made powerful methodologies such as electron backscattered diffraction (EBSD; e.g., Adams et al, 1993; Prior et al, 1999, 2009) readily available. This permits extremely detailed investigations and quantification of microstructures and, thereby, the derivation of refined conceptual models of the deformation mechanisms in quartz at the broadly defined brittle–viscous transition
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