Abstract
Accurate descriptions of natural fault surfaces and associated fault
rocks are important for understanding fault zone processes and
properties. Slickensides–grooved polished surfaces that record
displacement and wear along faults– develop measurable roughness and
characteristic microstructures during fault slip. We quantify the
roughness of natural slickensides from three different fault surfaces by
calculating the surfaces power spectra and height distributions and
analyze the microstructures formed above and below the slickensides.
Slickenside surfaces exhibit anisotropic self-affine roughness with
corresponding mean Hurst exponents in directions parallel– 0.53±0.07–
and perpendicular –0.6±0.1– to slip, consistent with reports from
other fault surfaces. Additionally, surfaces exhibit non-Gaussian height
distributions, with their skewness and kurtosis roughness parameters
having noticeable dependence on the scale of observation. Below the
surface, microstructural analyses reveal that S-C-C’ fabrics develop
adjacent to a C-plane-parallel principal slip zone characterized by a
sharp decrease in clast size and a thin (≤100 µm) nanoparticulate-rich
principal slip surface (PSS). These microstructures are present in most
analyzed samples suggesting they commonly form during slickenside
development regardless of lithology or tectonic setting. Our results
suggest that 1) PSS likely arise by progressive localization along
weaker oriented fabrics 2) deformation along PSS’s is energetic enough
to comminute the rocks into nanometric grains, and 3) fault geometry can
be further characterized by studying the height distributions of fault
surfaces, which are likely to impact stress distributions and frictional
responses along faults.