Abstract

AbstractThe source of fluid‐forming veins is of great importance in order to understand the hydraulic system acting in the earth's crust. The study of syntectonic antitaxial veins is one of the few methods by which the opening history can be deduced from rocks, and thus these veins are of primary importance in determining rock kinematics. Antitaxial veins were taken from black shales in two different tectonic settings in the Helvetic Alps, Switzerland, and the Taconic Appalachians, New York State. These syntectonic extension veins are regularly spaced and are oriented sub‐normal to bedding. The vein microstructure displays a symmetry around the median line in the centre of the vein, and a symmetry in cathodoluminescence banding parallel to the vein–wall interface, which suggests transport along bedding‐parallel dissolution planes from both vein‐walls. Antitaxial veins nucleated in transgranular fractures, but evidence for ongoing multiple crack‐seal increments is lacking; rather, veins grew continuously keeping close contact to the vein‐wall. Radiogenic 87Sr/86Sr ratios are higher in the surrounding matrix than in the vein, and higher than the corresponding seawater data in all samples. Variations are small and calcite in both the vein and the host rock were derived from the same source of fluid in the Helvetic samples. Mass balance of Sr suggests that the amount of calcite is too small in the surrounding host rock to be derived locally. Stable oxygen compositions are heavier in the host rock than in the veins, with overall low variation in both δ18O and δ13C values in the Mesozoic Helvetic samples. Data point to a rock‐buffered system, the precipitate most likely derived from an external source. The lower Palaeozoic Appalachian veins have lesser δ18O values than the host rock, similar to the Helvetic veins. Radiogenic 87Sr/86Sr data and a large heterogeneity in stable isotope values indicate an open system. Microstructural and isotopic evidence suggests that the antitaxial veins were formed by pervasive fluid flow, with the solute at least partly derived from an external source.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

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