Abstract

We provide structural and paleomagnetic evidence for major distributed rotational shear adjacent to and including the active Húsavík-Flatey transform fault in the southern part of the Tjörnes Fracture Zone of north Iceland. In the Flateyjarskagi peninsula immediately south of the fault, dike and bedding trends gradually change over about 11 km in approaching the transform fault main trace. In map view this pattern is seen as a progressive clockwise curvature of structural elements that equals or in some cases exceeds 90°. We present paleomagnetic analyses that verify large clockwise rotations of the same order as the curvature of structural elements observed. We compare our field and paleomagnetic observations with results from careful analog modeling that demonstrate how regional curvature of structures results from distributed strain that dominates the early stages of transform shear deformation, prior to the appearance of a transform fault system comprised of discrete shears. Our paleomagnetic results were obtained from one relatively undisturbed reference site, and three sites of deformed rocks in Flateyjarskagi and two in Tjörnes peninsula. These results indicate large vertical-axis rotations, and the progressive deflection of dike trends throughout northern Flateyjarskagi also serves as a separate quantitative estimate of vertical-axis rotation. The clockwise vertical-axis rotation estimates of 71°–97° from dikes are less than those deduced from paleomagnetism, but the order of magnitude is correct and we attribute the differences as mainly reflecting imperfect bed attitude adjustments used in analyses. The problem is typical for deformed rocks from high-latitude sites with steeply inclined paleomagnetic vectors. We consider our field measurements of dikes as more accurate indicators of true tectonic rotation. This regional deformation of Miocene rocks occurred early in the evolution of the TFZ transform, probably beginning ca. 7 Ma, when an older rift zone present in western North Iceland jumped to its present NVZ location in northeast Iceland. The early deformations involved shear strain distributed over a region about 20-km broad and produced the curved structures. This phase was followed by the sequential development of more narrowly distributed discrete shears, generating the initial Húsavík-Flatey transform fault.

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