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Faults and Faultings Aerial Photo of Wallace Creek and San Andreas Fault North American Plate The San Andreas Fault in the Carrizo Plain with offset in Wallace Creek Provided by: David Lynch, http://epod.usra.edu/ (91 m) Jyr-Ching Hu, Department of geosciences, National Taiwan University Fault • In a general sense, a fault is any surface or zone in the Earth across which measurable slip (shear displacement) develops. • In a more strict sense, faults are fractures on which slip develops primarily by brittle deformation. This second definition serves to distinguish a “fault” (sensu stricto) from a fault zone and shear zone. Fault Zone • Brittle structures in which loss of cohesion and slip occur on several faults within a band of definable width. Displacement in fault zone can involve formation and slip on many small, subparallel brittle faults (fault splays), or slip on a principal fault from which many small faults divergent, or slip on a anastomosing array of faults. Shear Zones (剪切帶) • Shear zones are ductile structures across which a rock body does not lose mesoscopic cohesion, so that strain is distributed across a band of definable width. • In ductile shear zone, rocks deformed by cataclasis, a process involving fracturing(破裂), crushing(壓碎), and frictional sliding(克服摩擦力 的滑動) of grains or rock fragments, or, more commonly, by crystal plastic deformation mechanisms. Fault, Fault Zone and Shear Zone 分支斷層 標誌層 Fault Geometry and Displacement Listric Fault (鏟形斷層) FaultsPlanar whosenormal dip decreases progressively faults and listric normalwith faultdepth. Fig. 16.616 Chapter Formation of a rollover anticline above a listric normal fault 捲筒式背斜 Different Types of Faults Extensional and Contractional Faulting Representing of Faults on Maps and Cross Sections Different Symbols for Dip-slip Fault and Strike-slip Fault 切開線 Klippe, window, allochthon, and autochthon in a thrust-faulted region Klippe (飛來峰) Allochthon (外來岩體) Autochthon (在地岩體) Thrust-fault (逆斷層) Window (構造窗) Fault Separation (斷距) and Determination of Net Slip Heave: Horizontal component of dip separation. Throw: Vertical component of dip separation. S: Strike separation D: Dip separation H: Horizontal separation V: Vertical separation Fault Bends 斷坡 斷坪 Releasing bend and restraining bend Restraining bend Releasing bend Transpression and Transtension • Transpression: movement across a segment of strike-slip fault results in some compression. • Transtension: movement across a segment of strike-slip segment faults results in some extension. Fault Terminations and Fault Length A: Ground surface B: Pluton C and D: one fault cut another D: Unconformity A: Merging with another fault; B: Horsetailing C: Dying out into a zone of ductile deformation (c) A series of ramps merging at depth with a basal detachment. Tip lines (尖端線) for an emergent fault and a blind fault Tip line: The boundary between the slipped and unslipped region at the end of a fault 斷層跡 尖端點 尖端線 Fault Terminations and Fault Length • Horsetail: A fault splits into numerous splays near its end, thereby creating a fan of small fractures. • Tip line: The boundary between the slipped and unslipped region at the end of the fault. • Emergent fault: If the fault intersected the ground surface while it was still active. • Exhumed fault: If it intersected the ground surface because the present surface of erosion has exposed an ancient, inactive fault. • Blind fault: A fault that dies out in the subsurface, thus does not intersect the ground surface. 斷層的成長是由中心向兩 端擴展。斷層中心的位移 最大,向兩端逐漸變小, 端點的位移為零。 斷層線的長度與斷層位移 的關係: 斷層線的長度(L)越長,所 累積的位移(D)越大。 D = cLn n為碎形維度。 D = 0.03 L1.06 Characteristics of Fault and Fault Zone • Brittle fault rock: Process of brittle faulting tends to break up rock into fragments. • Fault breccia: Creation of random array of nonsystematic mesoscopic fractures that surrounding angular blocks of rock. Random fabrics, no distinctive foliation. • Fault gouge: fine-grained rock flour • Cataclasite: a cohesive brittle rock that differs from gouge or breccia in that the fragments interlock, allowing the fragmented rock to remain coherent even without cementation. Random fabrics, no strong foliation or lineation Characteristics of Fault and Fault Zone • Protocataclasite: 10-50% of the rock is matrix • Cataclasite: 50-90% is matrix. • Ultracataclasite: 90-100% is matrix. Characteristics of Fault and Fault Zone • Psuedotachylyte (psuedotachylite): A glassy or microcrystalline material that forms when friction heating melts rock during slip on a fault. Pseudotachylyte flows into cracks between breccia fragment or into cracks penetrating the wall of the fault. • Argille scagliose: A fault rock that forms in very fine-grained clay or mica-rich rock (shale or slate) and characterized by the presence of a very strong wavy anastamosing foliation, the rock breaks into little scales or platy flakes. Characteristics of Fault and Fault Zone • Brittle fault rock: Process of brittle faulting tends to break up rock into fragments. • Fault breccia: Creation of random array of nonsystematic mesoscopic fractures that surrounding angular blocks of rock. Random fabrics, no distinctive foliation. • Fault gouge: Continued displacement across the fault zone crush and further fragment breccia and/or break off microscopic asperities protruding from slip surfaces in the fault zone. Fine-grained rock flour. Slickensides and Slip Lineations Growth of slip fibers Steps along a fiber-coated fault surface Subsidiary Faults and Fracture Geometry The orientation of Riedel (R), Conjugate Riedel (R’) and pshears. Note that the acute bisector of the R and R’-shear is parallel to the remote 1 direction. Fault-Related Folding (a)A small flexure develops during shortening of the layer, and anticline-syncline pair develops; (b) En echelon (or stepped) gashes form in the fold; (c) A fault breaks through the fold; cutting through a gentle flexure. (d) Geometry of a fault-propagation fold. Fault-Related Folding (a) 斷層彎曲褶皺 (Fault-bend fold) (c)底滑褶皺 (Detachment or decollement folds) (b)層內褶皺 (Intraformational folds), (d)垂簾褶皺 (Drape fold). Recognizing and Interpreting Faults • Surface rupture: Seismic faulting along an emergent strike-slip fault, manifesting by broken ground and fissures. • Fault scarp (斷層崖): Displacement on an emergent dip-slip fault creates a step in the ground surface. • Fault-line scarp (斷層線崖): Caused by the occurrence of a resistant stratigraphic layer that has been uplifted on one side. Fault-line scarp(斷層線崖) Fault-line scarp (斷層線崖) Recognition of Faults from subsurface Data 1. Abrupt steps on structure-contour maps; 2. Excess section (repeating of stratigraphy) or loss of section in a drill core; 3. Zone of brecciated rock in a drill core; 4. Seismic-reflection profiles 5. Linear anomalies or abrupt change in the wavelength of gravity and/or mangetic anomalies. Change in fault character with depth 糜稜岩 綠色片岩相 角閃岩相 Anderson’s theory of faulting 1. Faulting represents a response of rock to shear stress, so it only occurs when differential stress (d=1-2=2s) does not equal zero. 2. Faults that initiate as Coulomb shear fractures will form at an angle of about 30o to the 1 direction and contain the 2 direction. Why isn’t 1 at 45o to the fault plane, where the shear stress is maximum? • Recall the role of normal stress, where the ratio of shear stress to normal stress on planes orientated at about 30o to 1 is at a maximum. • The earth surface is a “free surface” (contact between ground & air/fluid) that cannot transmit a shear stress. Thus, regional principal stresses are parallel or perpendicular to the surface of the Earth in the upper crust. Limitation of Anderson’s theory 1. Faults do not necessarily initiate in intact rock. The frictional sliding strength of a preexisting surface is less than the shear failure of intact rock, thus preexisting joint surfaces or faults may be reactivated before new faults initiate. 2. The orientation of a fault may change as the rock body undergoes progressive deformation. 3. Systematic changes in stress trajectories are likely to occur with depth in mountain belts (e.g., along a regional detachment). Formation of Listric Fault: Changes in stress field with depth Curved principal stress trajectories and listric fault in a sheet of rock pushed from left side. 1. Top: Free surface 2. Bottom: Frictional sliding surface Formation of Listric Fault Predicted pattern of reverse faulting Fault forms at ~30o to the 1 trajectory Fluids and Faulting • Fault rocks are altered by reaction with a fluid phase (clay: feldspar + water). • Fault zone: Abundant veins precipitated from fluids (Qz, calcite, Chlorite, economic minerals) • Fault valving (活辮) or seismic pumping (地震灌水作用): Faulting-triggered fluid motion. Increasing in open space, fluid pressure in the fault zone temporarily drops relative to the surrounding rock. Fluidpressure gradient drive groundwater into the fault zone until new equilibrium. How presence of water in fault zone affects the stress at which faulting occurs? 1. Alteration minerals in the fault zone have lower shear strength than minerals in the unaltered rock. It permits the fault to slip at a lower frictional stress. 2. Presence of water in a rock cause hydrolytic weakness of silicate minerals; allow deformation to occur at lower stresses. 3. Pfluid in the fault zone decreases the effective normal stress in a rock body; thus decreases the shear stress necessarily to initiate a shear rupture in intact rock or frictional sliding on a preexisting surface. Thrust Sheet Paradox: Hubbert-Rubey hypothesis (a) Thrust sheet on a frictional surface. (b) Because of frictional resistance, the shear stress to initiate sliding exceeds the yield strength of frontal end of the thrust, causing fracturing and folding. (c) Thrust sheet moves coherently if it rides on a “cushion” of fluid. Stress and Faulting: A Continuing Debate How large the shear stress must be to initiate faults or to reactivate preexisting faults? The magnitude of s necessary to trigger faulting depends on fluid pressure, lithology, strain rate, temperature, and the orientation of preexisting fault. Variation in differential stress necessary to initiate sliding on reverse, strike-slip, and normal faults as a function of depth d gz ddifferential stress (d = 2s) : 3 for reverse fault 1.2 for strike-slip fault 0.75 for normal fault : ratio of pore-fluid & lithostatic pressure ( ranges from 0.4, for hydrostatic fluid pressure, to 1 for lithostatic pressure Shear heating • If movements on a fault surface in the brittle regime of the crust involves frictional sliding, some of the works done during fault movement is transferred into heat. s * = Ee + Es + Q : Amount of slip on the fault Ee: Energy radiated by earthquakes Es: Energy used to create new surfaces (breaking chemical bonds) Q: Heat generated. Shear heating s * > Q The San Andreas fault is a huge active fault, it is not bordered by a zone of high heat flow as predicted by the shear-heating model. Weak-fault hypothesis • Direct measurement of stress in the crust around the San Andreas Fault suggests that the 1 trajectory bends to that it is nearly perpendicular in the immediate vicinity of the fault. The San Andreas Fault is behaving like a surface of very low friction, and therefore could not support a large s. Stress drop (應力降) • Stress drop: When an earthquake occurs, energy is released and the value of s across the fault decrease. • Stress drops for earthquake estimated range between ~ 0.1 MPa and 150 MPa, but are typically in the range of 1-10 MPa. Fault Systems (a) Parallel array (b) Anastomosing array (c) En-echelon array (d) Relay array (e) Conjugate array (f) Random array Normal Fault Systems Synthetic Fault (同向斷層) Half graben Graben Antithetic Fault (反向斷層) Reverse Fault Systems Thrust systems are common along the margin of convergent plate boundaries and collisional orogen. Thrusting occurs in conjunction with the formation of folds, resulting tectonic provinces called fold-thrust belts (褶皺逆衝斷層帶). Imbricate fan (疊瓦狀排列) in thrust system Reverse Fault Systems Duplex : Consist of thrust that span the interval of rock between a high-level detachment called a roof thrust and a lower detachment called a floor thrust. Strike-Slip Fault System Flower structures: They splay into many separate faults in the near surface, resembles the head of flowers. Faulting and Society 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake damage Museum of the City of San Francisco Faulting and Resources 1. Oil: oil traps, oil migration and reservoirs. 2. Ore minerals: (a) hydrothermal fluids and veins (b) fault breccia 3. Groundwater: A fault zone may act as a permeable zone through which fluids migrate. Faulting and Earthquakes • Inactive fault: they haven’t slipped in a long time, and are probably permanently stuck. • Active faults: they have slipped recently or have the potential to slip in the near future. • Seismic fault: If an increment of faulting causes an earthquake. • Aseismic fault: Offset occurs without generating an earthquake. Aseismic fault = fault creep Active faults in Taiwan Fault creep 造山作用之見證二:花東縱谷中池上 斷層的潛移 東 西 如何觀察破裂面的變形? 釘網成果:人造建物破壞面之變形速率 s te r ho n ni / yr m m 27 : te a gr in n rte o sh yr / m m 23 : ate r g 地殼變形精密測量儀 地殼變形精密測量儀之精密度 大坡國小地殼變形精密測量儀之成果 Stick-slip (粘滑) behavior Laboratory frictional sliding experiments on granite. The stress drop (dashed lines) correspond to slip event. Recurrence interval • Recurrence interval: Average time between successive faulting events. 霧峰 鳳梨園 台大地質科學系 陳文山教授 南投 竹山 N-1 event N-2 event Chichi Earthquake 台大地質科學系 陳文山教授 古地震的垂直位移量 • 槽溝位置 921 • • • • • • ‧ • • 萬豐 1.3m 名間 2.5m 鳳梨園 1.6-2.1m 釋迦園 1.8m 仙公廟 1.1m 東陽里 中正公園 5-6m 文山農場 0.5m 竹山 1.8m n-1(<300) 0.4m 1.0m 1.0m n-2(~700-800) n-3(1900) n-4(3100) 1.2m 2.0m 1.1m 1.8m 1.3m 0.2m 0.3m 2.2m 1.0m? 1.0m? ? 0.5m 7.3m(<3340BP) 台大地質科學系 陳文山教授