Abstract

Abstract. At laboratory timescales, rock salt samples with different composition and microstructure show variance in steady-state creep rates, but it is not known if and how this variance is manifested at low strain rates and corresponding deviatoric stresses. Here, we aim to quantify this from the analysis of multilayer folds that developed in rock salt over geological timescale in the Ocnele Mari salt mine in Romania. The formation is composed of over 90 % of halite, while distinct multiscale layering is caused by variation in the fraction of impurities. Regional tectonics and mine-scale fold structure are consistent with deformation in a shear zone after strong shearing in a regional detachment, forming over 10 m scale chevron folds of a tectonically sheared sedimentary layering, with smaller folds developing on different scales in the hinges. Fold patterns at various scales clearly indicate that during folding, the sequence was mechanically stratified. The dark layers contain more impurities and are characterised by a more regular layer thickness compared to the bright layers and are thus inferred to have higher viscosities. Optical microscopy of gamma-decorated samples shows a strong shape-preferred orientation of halite grains parallel to the foliation, which is reoriented parallel to the axial plane of the folds studied. Microstructures indicate dislocation creep, together with extensive fluid-assisted recrystallisation and strong evidence for solution–precipitation creep. This provides support for linear (Newtonian) viscous rheology as a dominating deformation mechanism during the folding. Deviatoric stress during folding was lower than during shearing in the detachment at around 1 MPa. We investigate fold development on various scales in a representative multilayer package using finite-element numerical models, constrain the relative layer thicknesses in a selected outcrop, and design a numerical model. We explore the effect of different Newtonian viscosity ratios between the layers on the evolving folds on different scales. By comparing the field data and numerical results, we estimate that the effective viscosity ratio between the layers was larger than 10 and up to 20. Additionally, we demonstrate that the considerable variation of the layer thicknesses is not a crucial factor to develop folds on different scales. Instead, unequal distribution of the thin layers, which organise themselves into effectively single layers with variable thickness, can control deformation on various scales. Our results show that impurities can significantly change the viscosity of rock salt deforming at low deviatoric stress and introduce anisotropic viscosity, even in relatively pure layered rock.

Highlights

  • Understanding the rheology of rock salt during long-term deformation is of great significance in modelling salt tectonics and in salt engineering, e.g. salt diapir evolution, evolution of salt basins, designing, operation, and abandonment of underground storage caverns and nuclear waste repositories

  • Our observations strongly suggest that the rheology of rock salt was linear viscous during the folding

  • The salt exposed in the studied area of the Ocnele Mari salt mine typically shows an alternation of darker and lighter layers of rock salt (Figs. 3, 4, and 5)

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding the rheology of rock salt during long-term deformation is of great significance in modelling salt tectonics and in salt engineering, e.g. salt diapir evolution, evolution of salt basins, designing, operation, and abandonment of underground storage caverns and nuclear waste repositories.M. Understanding the rheology of rock salt during long-term deformation is of great significance in modelling salt tectonics and in salt engineering, e.g. salt diapir evolution, evolution of salt basins, designing, operation, and abandonment of underground storage caverns and nuclear waste repositories. Quantifying salt tectonic flow requires extrapolating experimentally derived flow laws to strain rates much lower than those attainable in the laboratory (Herchen et al, 2018). This extrapolation must be based on an understanding of the microscale deformation mechanisms operating under these conditions and on integrated studies of natural structures with experimental work (Urai et al, 1987; Weinberger et al, 2006). Reviews are provided by Carter and Hansen (1983) and Urai et al (2008a)

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