We investigate the deformation conditions of coeval mylonites and pseudotachylytes (pst) exposed in the brittle-ductile transition (BDT) in the Black Belt Shear Zone (BBSZ) in the Southern California Batholith using SEM (Scanning Electron Microscope) imaging, and Electron Backscatter Diffraction (EBSD) analysis. We selected four representative samples along a strain gradient of the BBSZ. The BBSZ is a transpressional shear zone developed within hornblende and biotite tonalites and diorites. The shear zone is discontinuous over a ~ 1.5 - 2 km wide zone, and kinematic indicators show oblique top-to-SW, sinistral-reverse to thrust-sense motion. Metamorphic titanite grains aligned within the mylonitic fabric date the deformation to ~ 83 Ma. SEM and EBSD data show mm-thick seams of pst contained within and parallel to mylonitic foliation, and mutually overprinting relationships between brittle and plastic deformation. We observe a brittle overprint of mylonitic fabric in sample 46 and fractured porphyroclasts reworked into mylonitic fabric in samples 45 and 47. EBSD maps from sample 45 and 47 show decreasing modal percentages of hydrous mafic minerals (biotite and hornblende) in the mylonites with proximity to pst seams, suggesting these melted to form pst. In pst seams, there are embayed and rounded/elliptical plagioclase survivor clasts and acicular and aligned biotite microlites parallel to mylonitic fabric (45 & 47). EBSD maps show pst survivor clasts with the same shear sense as the mylonitic fabric, suggesting co-development. Pole figures show weak CPO in hornblende and plagioclase of sample 46. Samples 45 and 47 have no CPO present in plagioclase, however samples 45, 46, and 47 show strong CPO patterns for quartz that are consistent with prism slip. We interpret dislocation creep as the deformation mechanism accommodating plastic deformation in host mylonites. Quartz CPO patterns provide evidence of mylonitic deformation at temperatures ~ 600o C, and the presence of plagioclase survivor clasts as evidence of pst temperatures of ~1100oC. The kinematically consistent sense of shear between pst and host mylonitic fabrics suggests coeval development that indicate shifts from brittle to ductile deformation. Our results suggest periodic pst-generating events involving melting of hydrous mafic minerals aided the development of coeval mylonites and pst in the BDT.
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Making sense of shear zone fabrics that record multiple episodes of deformation: Electron backscatter diffraction–derived and crystallographic vorticity axis–enhanced petrochronology
We present a new method of linking microstructures, electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD)–derived crystallographic vorticity axis (CVA) analysis, and titanite petrochronology to directly link fabric development to specific deformation events in shear zone rocks with complex histories. This approach is particularly useful where overprinting is incomplete, such that it is unknown which fabric is being dated by the petrochronometer. Here, we compared single-phase CVA patterns of fabric-forming minerals with those of synkinematic petrochronometers (e.g., titanite) to associate the timing of fabric development with deformational events in the middle crust of the George Sound shear zone, Fiordland, New Zealand. The host rocks to the George Sound shear zone include the Carboniferous Large Pluton, where titanite petrochronology demonstrates an unequivocally Cretaceous age of metamorphic titanite growth within mylonitic foliation. However, the host rocks show two distinct CVA patterns: a transtensional deformation event recorded by quartz and plagioclase, and a pure-shear–dominated transpressional deformation event recorded by biotite and titanite. Therefore, the transpressional CVA pattern of the titanite, coupled with its Cretaceous age, shows that it cannot be used to date the quartz and plagioclase fabric developed in response to an older transtensional deformation event. These results demonstrate the necessity of combining EBSD and CVA analysis with petrochronology to demonstrate that synkinematic accessory phase petrochronometers show the same kinematic deformation geometry (i.e., CVA pattern) as the fabric being dated.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1650219
- PAR ID:
- 10412902
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Geology
- ISSN:
- 0091-7613
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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