Controls on the diversity of the fault slip styles at the brittle-ductile transition: examples from the Cape Fold Belt, Nuy Valley, South Africa

Crustal deformation models have a first-order rheological division, with pressure-dependent brittle deformation predominating at shallow depths, and temperature-dependent viscous deformation occurring in the deeper levels of the crust. The brittle-ductile transition zone separates these two regimes,...

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Main Author: de Carvalho, Antónia
Other Authors: Diener, Johann
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Science 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31360
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-313602020-10-06T05:11:14Z Controls on the diversity of the fault slip styles at the brittle-ductile transition: examples from the Cape Fold Belt, Nuy Valley, South Africa de Carvalho, Antónia Diener, Johann Fagereng, Åke Geological Sciences Crustal deformation models have a first-order rheological division, with pressure-dependent brittle deformation predominating at shallow depths, and temperature-dependent viscous deformation occurring in the deeper levels of the crust. The brittle-ductile transition zone separates these two regimes, it occurs at approximately 350°C for quartz and it is characterised by mixed-mode brittle and viscous deformation. Complex fault zones exhumed to the surface may preserve evidence that can explain the mechanics and the complex slip behaviour of faults. Fault rocks response to applied shear stress is affected by environmental conditions during deformation (such as temperature and pressure), composition of fault zone, fluid presence and strain rate. Thus, the interplay of these factors determines the slip style of a specific fault and may lead to multiple slip styles that overprint each other. The Nuy Valley area in Worcester, Western Cape, South Africa, exposes a section through the deeper parts of the Cape Fold Belt, where the Malmesbury Group schists experienced thrust faulting in response to crustal shortening. Individual thrust faults are manifested in different ways, with quartz-cemented breccias, limestone mylonites, abundant quartz veining and cataclasites attesting to faulting occurring by a diversity of slip style, which allows investigating how the interplay of the controlling factors lead to the observed diversity of fault rock. Through mineral equilibria modelling, the pressure-temperature conditions under which faulting occurred was determined to lie between 5 - 8 KPa and 250 - 420C, with fluid content lines indicating low amounts of dehydration during peak metamorphism. The exhumed fault being analysed in this study was active at 10 - 15 km deep at 25C.km-1 geothermal gradient. The temperature over this transition is relatively constant and short ranged throughout geological evolution of Worcester and the cyclic superposition of ductile and brittle deformation and change in slip styles along fault zones as found in Nuy Valley cannot be justified by ambient temperature and pressure oscillations. Lithotype and competency of wallrocks play an essential role in deformation partitioning by being crucial determinants of rheological properties, and accounts for the coexistence of brittle and ductile fabrics but not for cyclic overprint of slip styles. Fluid presence is evidenced by an intense network of quartz veins and hydraulic breccias and contributes to the weakening and strengthening of wallrock during deformation. Slip style diversity in the study area is considered to the result of the interplay of compositional variabilities, fluid flow and strain rate variations associated with the seismic cycle. 2020-02-27T14:16:24Z 2020-02-27T14:16:24Z 2019 2020-02-27T11:51:54Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31360 eng application/pdf Faculty of Science Department of Geological Sciences
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Geological Sciences
spellingShingle Geological Sciences
de Carvalho, Antónia
Controls on the diversity of the fault slip styles at the brittle-ductile transition: examples from the Cape Fold Belt, Nuy Valley, South Africa
description Crustal deformation models have a first-order rheological division, with pressure-dependent brittle deformation predominating at shallow depths, and temperature-dependent viscous deformation occurring in the deeper levels of the crust. The brittle-ductile transition zone separates these two regimes, it occurs at approximately 350°C for quartz and it is characterised by mixed-mode brittle and viscous deformation. Complex fault zones exhumed to the surface may preserve evidence that can explain the mechanics and the complex slip behaviour of faults. Fault rocks response to applied shear stress is affected by environmental conditions during deformation (such as temperature and pressure), composition of fault zone, fluid presence and strain rate. Thus, the interplay of these factors determines the slip style of a specific fault and may lead to multiple slip styles that overprint each other. The Nuy Valley area in Worcester, Western Cape, South Africa, exposes a section through the deeper parts of the Cape Fold Belt, where the Malmesbury Group schists experienced thrust faulting in response to crustal shortening. Individual thrust faults are manifested in different ways, with quartz-cemented breccias, limestone mylonites, abundant quartz veining and cataclasites attesting to faulting occurring by a diversity of slip style, which allows investigating how the interplay of the controlling factors lead to the observed diversity of fault rock. Through mineral equilibria modelling, the pressure-temperature conditions under which faulting occurred was determined to lie between 5 - 8 KPa and 250 - 420C, with fluid content lines indicating low amounts of dehydration during peak metamorphism. The exhumed fault being analysed in this study was active at 10 - 15 km deep at 25C.km-1 geothermal gradient. The temperature over this transition is relatively constant and short ranged throughout geological evolution of Worcester and the cyclic superposition of ductile and brittle deformation and change in slip styles along fault zones as found in Nuy Valley cannot be justified by ambient temperature and pressure oscillations. Lithotype and competency of wallrocks play an essential role in deformation partitioning by being crucial determinants of rheological properties, and accounts for the coexistence of brittle and ductile fabrics but not for cyclic overprint of slip styles. Fluid presence is evidenced by an intense network of quartz veins and hydraulic breccias and contributes to the weakening and strengthening of wallrock during deformation. Slip style diversity in the study area is considered to the result of the interplay of compositional variabilities, fluid flow and strain rate variations associated with the seismic cycle.
author2 Diener, Johann
author_facet Diener, Johann
de Carvalho, Antónia
author de Carvalho, Antónia
author_sort de Carvalho, Antónia
title Controls on the diversity of the fault slip styles at the brittle-ductile transition: examples from the Cape Fold Belt, Nuy Valley, South Africa
title_short Controls on the diversity of the fault slip styles at the brittle-ductile transition: examples from the Cape Fold Belt, Nuy Valley, South Africa
title_full Controls on the diversity of the fault slip styles at the brittle-ductile transition: examples from the Cape Fold Belt, Nuy Valley, South Africa
title_fullStr Controls on the diversity of the fault slip styles at the brittle-ductile transition: examples from the Cape Fold Belt, Nuy Valley, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Controls on the diversity of the fault slip styles at the brittle-ductile transition: examples from the Cape Fold Belt, Nuy Valley, South Africa
title_sort controls on the diversity of the fault slip styles at the brittle-ductile transition: examples from the cape fold belt, nuy valley, south africa
publisher Faculty of Science
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31360
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