Abstract

Crystallographic preferred orientations (CPOs) in olivine are widely used to infer the mechanisms, conditions, and kinematics of deformation of mantle rocks. Recent experiments on water-saturated olivine were the first to produce a complex CPO characterised by bimodal orientation distributions of both [100] and [001] axes and inferred to form by combined activity of (001)[100], (100)[001], and (010)[100] slip. This result potentially provides a new microstructural indicator of deformation in the presence of elevated concentrations of intracrystalline hydrous point defects and has implications for the interpretation of seismic anisotropy. Here, we document a previously unexplained natural example of this CPO type in a xenolith from Lesotho and demonstrate that it too may be explained by elevated concentrations of hydrous point defects. We test and confirm the hypothesis that combined (001)[100], (100)[001], and (010)[100] slip were responsible for formation of this CPO by (1) using high-angular resolution electron backscatter diffraction to precisely characterise the dislocation types present in both the experimental and natural samples and (2) employing visco-plastic self-consistent simulations of CPO evolution to assess the ability of these slip systems to generate the observed CPO. Finally, we utilise calculations based on effective-medium theory to predict the anisotropy of seismic wave velocities arising from the CPO of the xenolith. Maxima in S-wave velocities and anisotropy are parallel to both the shear direction and shear plane normal, whereas maxima in P-wave velocities are oblique to both, adding complexity to interpretation of deformation kinematics from seismic anisotropy.

Highlights

  • Deformation microstructures, including crystallographic preferred orientations (CPOs), in olivine impact the rheological and other petrophysical properties of mantle rocks and provide key records of deformation events and the processes by which they occur

  • Crystallographic preferred orientations (CPOs) developed in aggregates of olivine with elevated concentrations of intracrystalline hydrous point defects are typified by single maxima of [100] and [001] axes in orientations that indicate dominance of one of the slip systems (001)[100], (100)[001], or (010)[001] (E, C, and B-type CPOs, respectively) (e.g., Katayama et al, 2004; Jung et al, 2006)

  • HR-electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) analysis demonstrates that samples with the bimodal CPO contain substructure dominated by (010)[100], (001)[100], and (100)[001] edge dislocations, whereas anhydrous olivine deformed under otherwise similar conditions generally lacks (100)[001] edge dislocations

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Summary

Introduction

Deformation microstructures, including crystallographic preferred orientations (CPOs), in olivine impact the rheological and other petrophysical properties of mantle rocks and provide key records of deformation events and the processes by which they occur. CPOs developed in aggregates of olivine with elevated concentrations of intracrystalline hydrous point defects are typified by single maxima of [100] and [001] axes in orientations that indicate dominance of one of the slip systems (001)[100], (100)[001], or (010)[001] (E-, C-, and B-type CPOs, respectively) (e.g., Katayama et al, 2004; Jung et al, 2006).

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