Carbonate-bearing normal faults are important structures for controlling fluid flow and seismogenesis within the brittle upper crust. Numerous studies have tried to characterize fault zone structure and earthquake slip processes along carbonate-bearing faults. However, due to the different scales of investigation, these studies are not often integrated to provide a comprehensive fault image. Here we present a multi-scale investigation of a normal fault exhumed from seismogenic depths. The fault extends for a length of 10km with a maximum width of about 1.5km and consists of 5 sub-parallel and interacting segments. The maximum displacement (370-650m) of each fault segment is partitioned along sub-parallel slipping zones extending for a total width of about 50m. Each slipping zone is characterized by slipping surfaces exhibiting different slip plane phenomena. Fault rock development is controlled by the protolith lithology. In massive limestone, moving away from the slip surface, we observe a thin layer (<2cm) of ultracataclasite, cataclasite (2-10cm) and fault breccia. In marly limestone, the fault rock consists of a cataclasite with hydrofractures and smectite-rich pressure solution seams. At the micro-nanoscale, the slip surface consists of a continuous and thin (<300μm) layer composed of coarse calcite grains (~5-20μm in size) associated with sub-micrometer grains showing fading grain boundaries, voids and/or vesicles, and suggesting thermal decomposition processes. Micrometer-sized calcite crystals show nanoscale polysynthetic twinning affected by the occurrence of subgrain boundaries and polygonalized nanostructures. Investigations at the kilometres-tens of meter scale provide fault images that can be directly compared with high-resolution seismological data and when combined can be used to develop a comprehensive characterization of seismically active fault structures in carbonate lithologies. Micro and nanoscale investigations along the principal slipping zone suggest that different deformation processes, including plastic deformation and thermal decomposition, were active during seismic slip. © 2014 Elsevier Ltd.
Fault structure and slip localization in carbonate-bearing normal faults: An example from the Northern Apennines of Italy / Collettini, Cristiano; B. M., Carpenter; C., Viti; F., Cruciani; Mollo, Silvio; T., Tesei; Trippetta, Fabio; L., Valoroso; L., Chiaraluce. - In: JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY. - ISSN 0191-8141. - ELETTRONICO. - 67:PA(2014), pp. 154-166. [10.1016/j.jsg.2014.07.017]
Fault structure and slip localization in carbonate-bearing normal faults: An example from the Northern Apennines of Italy
COLLETTINI, CRISTIANO;MOLLO, SILVIO;TRIPPETTA, FABIO;
2014
Abstract
Carbonate-bearing normal faults are important structures for controlling fluid flow and seismogenesis within the brittle upper crust. Numerous studies have tried to characterize fault zone structure and earthquake slip processes along carbonate-bearing faults. However, due to the different scales of investigation, these studies are not often integrated to provide a comprehensive fault image. Here we present a multi-scale investigation of a normal fault exhumed from seismogenic depths. The fault extends for a length of 10km with a maximum width of about 1.5km and consists of 5 sub-parallel and interacting segments. The maximum displacement (370-650m) of each fault segment is partitioned along sub-parallel slipping zones extending for a total width of about 50m. Each slipping zone is characterized by slipping surfaces exhibiting different slip plane phenomena. Fault rock development is controlled by the protolith lithology. In massive limestone, moving away from the slip surface, we observe a thin layer (<2cm) of ultracataclasite, cataclasite (2-10cm) and fault breccia. In marly limestone, the fault rock consists of a cataclasite with hydrofractures and smectite-rich pressure solution seams. At the micro-nanoscale, the slip surface consists of a continuous and thin (<300μm) layer composed of coarse calcite grains (~5-20μm in size) associated with sub-micrometer grains showing fading grain boundaries, voids and/or vesicles, and suggesting thermal decomposition processes. Micrometer-sized calcite crystals show nanoscale polysynthetic twinning affected by the occurrence of subgrain boundaries and polygonalized nanostructures. Investigations at the kilometres-tens of meter scale provide fault images that can be directly compared with high-resolution seismological data and when combined can be used to develop a comprehensive characterization of seismically active fault structures in carbonate lithologies. Micro and nanoscale investigations along the principal slipping zone suggest that different deformation processes, including plastic deformation and thermal decomposition, were active during seismic slip. © 2014 Elsevier Ltd.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.