High stress deformation and short-term thermal pulse preserved in
exhumed lower crustal seismogenic faults (Lofoten, Norway)
Abstract
Seismic rupture in strong, anhydrous lithologies of the lower
continental crust requires high failure stress, in the absence of high
pore fluid pressure. Several mechanisms proposed to generate high
stresses at depth imply transient loading driven by a spectrum of stress
changes, ranging from highly localised stress amplifications to
crustal-scale stress transfers. High transient stresses up to GPa
magnitude are proposed by field and modelling studies, but the evidence
for transient pre-seismic stress loading is often difficult to extract
from the geological record due to overprinting by coseismic damage and
slip. However, the local preservation of deformation microstructures
indicative of crystal-plastic and brittle deformation associated with
the seismic cycle in the lower crust offers the opportunity to constrain
the progression of deformation before, during and after rupture,
including stress and temperature evolution. Here, detailed study of
pyroxene microstructures characterises the short-term evolution of high
stress deformation and temperature changes experienced prior to, and
during, lower crustal earthquake rupture. Pyroxenes are sampled from
pseudotachylyte-bearing faults and damage zones of lower crustal
earthquakes recorded in the exhumed granulite facies terrane of Lofoten,
northern Norway. The progressive sequence of microstructures indicates
localised high-stress (at the GPa level) preseismic loading accommodated
by low temperature plasticity, followed by coseismic pulverisation-style
fragmentation and subsequent grain growth triggered by the short-term
heat pulse associated with frictional sliding. Thus, up to GPa-level
transient high stress leading to earthquake nucleation in the dry lower
crust can occur in nature, and can be preserved in the fault rock
microstructure.