Abstract

The deformation behaviour of partially molten rocks was investigated using in situ analogue experiments with norcamphor+ethanol, as well as partially molten KNO 3+LiNO 3. Three general deformation regimes could be distinguished during bulk pure shear deformation. In regime I, above ca. 8–10 vol.% liquid (melt) fraction ( ϕ bulk), deformation is by compaction, distributed granular flow, and grain boundary sliding (GBS). At ϕ bulk<8–10 vol.% (regime II), GBS localizes in conjugate shear zones. Liquid segregation is inefficient or even reversed as the dilatant shear zones draw in melt to locally exceed the 8–10 vol.% threshold. At even lower ϕ bulk (regime III), grains form a coherent framework that deforms by grain boundary migration accommodated dislocation creep, associated with efficient segregation of remaining liquid. The transition liquid fraction between regimes I and II ( ϕ LT) depends mainly on the grain geometry and is therefore comparable in both analogue systems. The transition liquid fraction between regimes II and III ( ϕ GBS-L) varies between 4–7 vol.% for norcamphor–ethanol and ca. 1 vol.% for KNO 3+LiNO 3 and depends on system specific parameters. Regime II behaviour in our experiments can explain the frequently observed small melt-bearing shear zones in partially molten rocks and in HT experiments.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call