EGU2020-17399
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-17399
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Mixed-mode Slip Behavior and Strength Evolution of an Actively Exhuming Low-Angle Normal Fault, Woodlark Rift, SE Papua New Guinea

Marcel Mizera1, Timothy Little2, Carolyn Boulton2, James Biemiller3, and David Prior4
Marcel Mizera et al.
  • 1Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht 3508 TA, The Netherlands (m.mizera@uu.nl)
  • 2Geography, Environment and Earth Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington 6140, New Zealand
  • 3Institute for Geophysics, University of Texas, Austin, Texas, United States
  • 4Department of Geology, University of Otago, Dunedin 9016, New Zealand

Rapid dip-slip (11.7±3.5 mm/yr) on the active Mai'iu low-angle normal fault in SE Papua New Guinea enabled the preservation of early formed microstructures in mid to shallow crustal rocks. The corrugated, convex-upward shaped fault scarp dips as low as 16°–20° near its trace close to sea level and forms a continuous landscape surface traceable for at least 28 km in the NNE slip-direction. Structurally, offset on the Mai'iu fault has formed a metamorphic core complex and has exhumed a metabasaltic footwall during 30–45 km of dip slip on a rolling-hinge style detachment fault. The exhumed crustal section records the spatiotemporal evolution of fault rock deformation mechanisms and the differential stresses that drive slip on this active low-angle normal fault.

The Mai'iu fault exposes a <3 m-thick fault core consisting of gouges and cataclasites. These deformed units overprint a structurally underlying carapace of metabasaltic mylonites that are locally >60 m-thick. Detailed microstructural, textural and geochemical data combined with chlorite-based geothermometry of these fault rocks reveal a variety of deformation processes operating within the Mai'iu fault zone. A strong crystallographic preferred orientation of non-plastically deformed actinolite in a pre-existing, fine-grained (6–33 µm) mafic assemblage indicates that mylonitic deformation was controlled by diffusion-accommodated grain-boundary sliding together with syn-tectonic chlorite precipitation at >270–370°C. At shallower crustal levels on the fault (T≈150–270°C), fluid-assisted mass transfer and metasomatic reactions created a foliated cataclasite fabric during inferred periods of aseismic creep. Pseudotachylites and ultracataclasites mutually cross-cut both the foliations and one another, recording repeated episodes of seismic slip. In these fault rocks, paleopiezometry based on calcite twinning yields peak differential stresses of ~140–185 MPa at inferred depths of 8–12 km. These differential stresses were high enough to drive continued slip on a ~35° dipping segment of the Mai'iu fault, and to cause new brittle yielding of strong mafic rocks in the exhuming footwall of that fault. In the uppermost crust (<8 km; T<150°C), where the Mai'iu fault dips shallowly and is most severely misoriented for slip, actively deforming fault rocks are clay-rich gouges containing abundant saponite, a frictionally weak mineral (µ<0.28).

In summary, these results combined with fault dislocation models of GPS velocities from campaign stations in this region suggest a combination of brittle frictional and viscous flow processes within the Mai'iu fault zone. Gouges of the Mai'iu fault have been strongly altered by fluids and are frictionally weak near the surface, where the fault is most strongly misoriented. At greater depths (8–12 km) the fault is stronger and slips both by aseismic creep and episodic earthquakes (a mixture of fast and slow slip) in response to locally high differential stresses.

How to cite: Mizera, M., Little, T., Boulton, C., Biemiller, J., and Prior, D.: Mixed-mode Slip Behavior and Strength Evolution of an Actively Exhuming Low-Angle Normal Fault, Woodlark Rift, SE Papua New Guinea, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-17399, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-17399, 2020

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