Strength and Stress Evolution of an Actively Exhuming Low-Angle Normal
Fault, Woodlark Rift, SE Papua New Guinea
Abstract
Quantifying lithospheric strength is essential to better understand
seismicity in continental regions. We estimate differential stresses and
principal stress orientations driving rapid slip (~10
mm/yr) on the active Mai’iu low-angle normal fault (dipping 15–24° at
the Earth’s surface) in Papua New Guinea. The fault’s mafic footwall
hosts a well-preserved sequence of mylonite, foliated cataclasite,
ultracataclasite and gouge. In these fault rocks, we combine stress
inversion of fault-slip data and paleostress analysis of syntectonically
emplaced calcite veins with microstructural and clumped-isotope
geothermometry to constrain a syn-exhumational sequence of deformation
stresses and temperatures, and to construct a stress profile through the
exhumed footwall of the Mai’iu fault. This includes: 1) at
~12–20 km depth (T≈275–370°C), mylonites accommodated
slip on the Mai’iu fault at low differential stresses
(>25–135 MPa) before being overprinted by localized
brittle deformation at shallower depths; 2) at ~6–12 km
depth (T≈130–275°C) differential stresses in the foliated cataclasites
and ultracataclasites were high enough (>150 MPa) to drive
slip on a mid-crustal portion of the fault (dipping 30–40°), and to
trigger brittle yielding of mafic footwall rocks in a zone of mixed-mode
seismic/aseismic slip; and 3) at the shallowest crustal levels
(T<150°C) on the most poorly oriented part of the Mai’iu fault
(dipping ~20–24°), slip occurred on frictionally weak
clay-rich gouges (μ≈0.15–0.38). Subvertical σ1 and subhorizontal σ3
parallel to the extension direction, with σ1≈σ2 (constriction), reflect
vertical unloading and 3-D bending stresses during rolling-hinge style
flexure of the footwall.