Abstract

Extensional detachment faults, which have been widely documented in slow-spreading and ultraslow-spreading ridges on Earth, can effectively localize deformation due to their weakness. After the onset of oceanic closure, these weak oceanic detachments may directly control the nucleation of a subduction zone parallel to the former mid-ocean ridge, as is suggested for the Neotethys in Middle Jurassic times. So far, this hypothesis has only been tested by 2D numerical models, whereas the geometry of detachment faults is intrinsically three-dimensional. Here, we conducted a series of 3D numerical thermomechanical experiments in order to investigate the formation of detachment faults in slow oceanic spreading systems and their subsequent response upon inversion from oceanic spreading to convergence.Numerical results show that during the oceanic spreading stage, the formation of detachment faults strongly depends on the magnitude of the healing rate of faulted rocks in the oceanic lithosphere, that reflects the stability of hydrated minerals along fractured rocks. The detachment faults formed in our 3D numerical models deviate from the “rolling hinge model” of oceanic detachment faulting where fault footwalls are rotated and oceanic core complexes are thereby formed. Our results accentuate that the controlling physical parameters for the development of oceanic core complexes and detachment faults can differ, and that their coupled development in nature remains a key target for future research.Upon modeled transition to compression, previously formed asymmetric spreading patterns are prone to asymmetric inversion, where one oceanic plate thrusts under the other. Our results suggest that detachment faults accommodate significant amounts of shortening during the initiation of oceanic closure, but, in contrast to the previously proposed simple conceptual model, no direct inversion of a single detachment fault into an incipient subduction zone is observed. Instead, a widespread interaction of multiple detachment faults occurs after the onset of convergence. Ultimately, the nascent subduction zone cuts through the base of several pre-existing detachment faults, thereby forming an initial accretionary wedge in the incipient fore-arc.

Highlights

  • Subduction occurring at multiple locations on Earth is considered to be a key driving process of the modern plate tectonic regime (e.g., Gurnis et al, 2004; Stern and Gerya, 2017)

  • Based on theoretical considerations and natural data, Stern (2004) proposed two major modes of subduction initiation: spontaneous and induced

  • Detachment faults formed in our models cut the lithosphere to depths of 7-8, which would allow for hydration along the fault zone (Escartin et al, 2008) and thereby the results are consistent with this suggested relationship between low healing rates and hydrothermal alteration of fractured rocks

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Summary

Introduction

Subduction occurring at multiple locations on Earth is considered to be a key driving process of the modern plate tectonic regime (e.g., Gurnis et al, 2004; Stern and Gerya, 2017). Cold, old lithospheric plates sink spontaneously in the mantle under their own weight due to their inherent gravitational instability (Vlaar and Wortel, 1976; Stern, 2004) The dynamics of the latter subduction initiation mode are governed by the interaction of forces that drive and resist subduction. In order to initiate an induced subduction zone, the externally applied compressional forces must overcome the resistive forces, i.e. the plates’ elastic resistance to bending and the frictional shear resistance at pre-existing fault zones (McKenzie, 1977; Matsumoto and Tomoda, 1983; Gurnis et al, 2004). This constraint has been resolved in some cases by former numerical studies, such as the induced initiation of intra-oceanic subduction zones along transform faults and fracture zones in rift systems (e.g. Matsumoto and Tomoda, 1983; Gurnis et al, 2004; Stern and Gerya, 2017 and references therein)

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