1. How do lineations reflect the strain history of transpressive shear zones? The example of the active Alpine Fault zone, New Zealand.
- Author
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Toy, V.G., Norris, R.J., Prior, D.J., Walrond, M., and Cooper, A.F.
- Subjects
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SHEAR zones , *STRAINS & stresses (Mechanics) , *MYLONITE , *FAULT zones , *KINEMATICS , *ROCK deformation , *MATHEMATICAL models - Abstract
Abstract: Lineations within mylonites exhumed in the hanging wall of New Zealand's active Alpine Fault zone have a complicated relationship to contemporary plate kinematics. The shear zone is triclinic and macroscopic object lineations are not usually parallel to the simple shear direction, despite high total simple shear strains (γ ≥ 150). This is mostly because the lineations are inherited from pre-mylonitic fabrics, and have not been rotated into parallelism with the mylonitic stretching direction (which pitches c. 44° in the fault plane). Furthermore, some lineations have been variably rotated depending on whether they are present in shear bands or microlithons, which accommodated bulk strains with different vorticities. Total strains required to obtain parallelism between the finite maximum principal stretching direction calculated from transpression models and these mylonitic lineations, are pure shear stretch, S1 ∼ 3.5; simple shear 11.7 < γ < 150. The observations and numerical models also show that linear features are not rotated much during simple shear because they initially lie within the shear plane, and that inherited fabric components may not be destroyed until very high simple shear strains have been attained. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
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