Genesis of corrugated fault surfaces by strain localization recorded at oceanic detachments

Seafloor spreading at slow and ultraslow rates is often taken up by extension on large-offset faults called detachments, which exhume lower crustal and mantle rocks, and in some cases make up domed oceanic core complexes. The exposed footwall may reveal a characteristic pattern of spreading-parallel...

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Veröffentlicht in:Earth and planetary science letters 2018-09, Vol.498, p.116-128
Hauptverfasser: Parnell-Turner, Ross, Escartín, Javier, Olive, Jean-Arthur, Smith, Deborah K., Petersen, Sven
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container_title Earth and planetary science letters
container_volume 498
creator Parnell-Turner, Ross
Escartín, Javier
Olive, Jean-Arthur
Smith, Deborah K.
Petersen, Sven
description Seafloor spreading at slow and ultraslow rates is often taken up by extension on large-offset faults called detachments, which exhume lower crustal and mantle rocks, and in some cases make up domed oceanic core complexes. The exposed footwall may reveal a characteristic pattern of spreading-parallel corrugations, the largest of which are clearly visible in multibeam bathymetric data, and whose nature and origin have been the subject of controversy. In order to tackle this debate, we use available near-bottom bathymetric surveys recently acquired with autonomous deep-sea vehicles over five corrugated detachments along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. With a spatial resolution of 2 m, these data allow us to compare the geometry of corrugations on oceanic detachments that are characterized by differing fault zone lithologies, and accommodate varying amounts of slip. The fault surfaces host corrugations with wavelengths of 10–250 m, while individual corrugations are finite in length, typically 100–500 m. Power spectra of profiles calculated across the corrugated fault surfaces reveal a common level of roughness, and indicate that the fault surfaces are not fractal. Since systematic variation in roughness with fault offset is not evident, we propose that portions of the exposed footwalls analyzed here record constant brittle strain. We assess three competing hypotheses for corrugation formation and find that the continuous casting and varying depth to brittle–ductile transition models cannot explain the observed corrugation geometry nor available geological observations. We suggest a model involving brittle strain localization on a network of linked fractures within a zone of finite thickness is a better explanation for the observations. This model explains corrugations on oceanic detachment faults exposed at the seafloor and on normal faults in the continents, and is consistent with recently imaged corrugations on a subduction zone megathrust. Hence fracture linkage and coalescence may give rise to corrugated fault zones, regardless of earlier deformation history and tectonic setting. •Five oceanic detachment faults mapped at 2 m resolution using underwater vehicles.•Corrugation geometry does not depend upon fault lithology or deformation history.•Fracture coalescence can lead to corrugated faults in the oceans and continents.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.epsl.2018.06.034
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The exposed footwall may reveal a characteristic pattern of spreading-parallel corrugations, the largest of which are clearly visible in multibeam bathymetric data, and whose nature and origin have been the subject of controversy. In order to tackle this debate, we use available near-bottom bathymetric surveys recently acquired with autonomous deep-sea vehicles over five corrugated detachments along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. With a spatial resolution of 2 m, these data allow us to compare the geometry of corrugations on oceanic detachments that are characterized by differing fault zone lithologies, and accommodate varying amounts of slip. The fault surfaces host corrugations with wavelengths of 10–250 m, while individual corrugations are finite in length, typically 100–500 m. Power spectra of profiles calculated across the corrugated fault surfaces reveal a common level of roughness, and indicate that the fault surfaces are not fractal. 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subjects corrugations
Earth Sciences
mid-ocean ridge
oceanic detachment faulting
Sciences of the Universe
Tectonics
title Genesis of corrugated fault surfaces by strain localization recorded at oceanic detachments
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