Slow-to-Fast Deformation in Mafic Fault Rocks on an Active Low-Angle
Normal Fault, Woodlark Rift, SE Papua New Guinea
Abstract
Slip on the active Mai’iu low-angle normal fault in Papua New Guinea
that dips 15–24° at the surface has exhumed in its footwall a single,
continuous fault surface across a >25 km-wide dome. Derived
from a metabasaltic protolith, the fault zone consists of a ≤3 m-thick
zone of gouges and cataclasites that overprint a structurally underlying
carapace of extensional mylonites. Detailed microstructural and
geochemical data, combined with chlorite-based geothermometry, reveal
changing deformation processes and conditions in the Mai’iu fault rocks
as they were exhumed. The microstructure of non-plastically deformed
actinolite grains inherited from the fine-grained (6–35 µm) basaltic
protolith indicate that shearing at depth was controlled by diffusion
creep accompanied by grain-boundary sliding of these grains together
with chlorite neo-crystallization at T≥270–370°C. In a foliated
cataclasite unit at shallower crustal levels (T≈150–270°C),
fluid-assisted mass transfer and metasomatic reactions accommodated
aseismic, distributed shearing; pseudotachylites and ultracataclasites
in the same unit indicate that such creep was punctuated by episodes of
seismic slip—after which creep resumed. At the shallowest levels
(T≤150°C), gouges contain abundant saponite, a frictionally weak mineral
that promotes creep on the shallowest-dipping (≤24°), most poorly
oriented part of the Mai’iu fault. Our field, microstructural and
geochemical data of freshly exhumed fault rocks support geodetic,
seismological, and geomorphic evidence for mixed seismic-to-aseismic
slip on this active low-angle normal fault.