brittle grain-size reduction of feldspar, phase mixing and strain localization in granitoids at mid-crustal conditions (pernambuco shear zone, ne brazil)
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ID: 162564
2016
The Pernambuco shear zone (northeastern Brazil) is a large-scale strike-slip
fault that, in its eastern segment, deforms granitoids at mid-crustal
conditions. Initially coarse-grained (> 50 µm) feldspar
porphyroclasts are intensively fractured and reduced to an ultrafine-grained
mixture consisting of plagioclase and K-feldspar grains
(< 15 µm) localized in C' shear bands. Detailed
microstructural observations and electron
backscatter diffraction (EBSD) analysis do not show evidence of
intracrystalline plasticity in feldspar porphyroclasts and/or fluid-assisted
replacement reactions. Quartz occurs either as thick (∼ 1–2 mm)
monomineralic veins transposed along the shear
zone foliation or as thin ribbons ( ≤ 25 µm width) dispersed
in the feldspathic mixture. The microstructure and c axis crystallographic-preferred orientation are similar in the thick monomineralic veins and in the
thin ribbons, and they suggest dominant subgrain rotation recrystallization and
activity of prism < a > and
rhomb < a > slip systems. However, the grain size in
monophase recrystallized domains decreases when moving from the quartz
monomineralic veins to the thin ribbons embedded in the feldspathic C' bands
(14 µm vs. 5 µm respectively). The fine-grained feldspar mixture
has a weak crystallographic-preferred orientation interpreted as the result
of shear zone parallel-oriented growth during diffusion creep, as well as the
same composition as the fractured porphyroclasts, suggesting that it
generated by mechanical fragmentation of rigid porphyroclasts with a
negligible role of chemical disequilibrium. Once C' shear bands were
generated and underwent viscous deformation at constant stress conditions, the
polyphase feldspathic aggregate would have deformed at a strain rate 1
order of magnitude faster than the monophase quartz monomineralic veins, as
evidenced by applying experimentally and theoretically calibrated flow laws
for dislocation creep in quartz and diffusion creep in feldspar. Overall, our
data set indicates that feldspar underwent a brittle-viscous transition while
quartz was deforming via crystal plasticity. The resulting rock
microstructure consists of a two-phase rheological mixture (fine-grained
feldspars and recrystallized quartz) in which the polyphase feldspathic
material localized much of the strain. Extensive grain-size reduction and
weakening of feldspars is attained in the East Pernambuco mylonites mainly
via fracturing which would trigger a
switch to diffusion creep and strain localization without a prominent
role of metamorphic reactions.
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Authors | ;G. Viegas;L. Menegon;C. Archanjo |
Journal | european clinical respiratory journal |
Year | 2016 |
DOI | 10.5194/se-7-375-2016 |
URL | |
Keywords | Keywords not found |
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