Crustal anisotropy and deformation of the southeastern Tibetan Plateau revealed by seismic anisotropy of mylonitic amphibolites

The composition and deformation patterns in the deep crust of southeastern Tibet are remain controversial. In this study, we present microstructures, fabric and seismic properties of amphibolites from the Ailao Shan-Red River shear zone, western Yunnan, China. The amphibolites display a distinct myl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of structural geology 2022-06, Vol.159, p.104605, Article 104605
Hauptverfasser: Huang, Baoyou, Zhang, Bo, Zhang, Jinjiang, Liu, Siqi, Zhang, Lei, Ma, Weiwei, Chen, Siyu, Li, Xiaorong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The composition and deformation patterns in the deep crust of southeastern Tibet are remain controversial. In this study, we present microstructures, fabric and seismic properties of amphibolites from the Ailao Shan-Red River shear zone, western Yunnan, China. The amphibolites display a distinct mylonitic foliation, and the amphibole grains show low intracrystalline deformation, slight compositional zoning but strong crystallographic preferred orientations (CPOs). We explain these CPOs could have formed by rigid body rotation during deformation accommodated by diffusion creep and grain boundary sliding. The amphibolites show strong seismic anisotropies (AVp = 4.6–9.3% and Max. AVs = 3.2–9.0%). Rock recipe modelling results indicate the seismic anisotropies of the mylonitic amphibolites are dominated by the content of biotite and amphibole. The delay time (0.28–1.01 s, average of 0.58 s) calculated for a 40 km-thick amphibolite layer is consistent with the observed delay time (0.52 s) of Pms wave splitting in this region, which indicates a thick amphibolitic layer in the crust of the southeastern Tibetan Plateau. The observed Pms wave splitting, extensive fold deformation and low velocity zones (LVZs) in the Diancang Shan (DCS) massif indicate two anisotropic layers in the crust. The upper layer related to frozen fabrics of amphibolites, which deformed during compressional folding and strike-slip shear. The lower layer related to the alignment of amphibole and melt pocket induced by present-day channel flow. The observed Pms wave splitting in the Ailao Shan (ALS) massif is attributed to amphibolites with vertical foliation and horizontal lineation which are generated by compressional folding and strike-slip shearing. •The amphibole CPOs formed by rigid body rotation accommodated by diffusion creep and grain boundary sliding.•A thick amphibolite layer can be responsible for the observed Pms wave splitting in southeastern Tibet.•Rock recipe modelling results indicate the seismic anisotropies of the amphibolites dominated by the biotite and amphibole.•The LVZ-1 may indicate the crustal flow, while LVZ-2 may be associated with the asthenospheric upwelling processes.
ISSN:0191-8141
1873-1201
DOI:10.1016/j.jsg.2022.104605