Inhaltsbereich
Scientific Drilling ICDP Publications
Abstract (EDOC: 7549)
We compare recent magnetotelluric investigations of four large
fault systems: (i) the actively deforming, ocean-continent
interplate San Andreas Fault (SAF), (ii) the actively deforming,
continent-continent interplate Dead Sea Transform (DST), (iii) the
currently inactive, trench-linked intraplate West Fault (WF) in
northern Chile, and (iv) the Waterberg Fault/Omaruru Lineament
(WF/OL) in Namibia, a fossilized intraplate shear zone formed
during early Proterozoic continental collision. These fault zones
show both similarities and marked differences in their electrical
subsurface structure. The central segment of the SAF is
characterized by a zone of high conductivity extending to several
kilometres depth and attributed to fluids within a highly
fractured damage zone. The WF exhibits a less pronounced but
similar fault zone conductor (FZC) which can be explained by
meteoric waters entering the fault zone. The DST appears different
as it shows a distinct lack of a FZC and seems to act primarily as
an impermeable barrier to cross-fault fluid transport. Differences
in the electrical structure of these faults within the upper crust
may be linked to the degree of deformation localization within the
fault zone. At the DST, with no observable fault zone conductor,
strain may have been localized for a considerable time span along
a narrow, meter-scale damage zone with a sustained strength
difference between the shear plane and the surrounding host rock.
In the case of the SAF, a positive correlation of conductance and
fault activity is observed, with more active fault segments
associated with wider, deeper, and more conductive fault zone
anomalies. Fault zone conductors, however, do not uniquely
identify specific architectural or hydrological units of a fault.
A more comprehensive whole-fault picture for the brittle crust can
be developed in combination with seismicity and structural
information. Giving a window into lower-crustal shear zones, the
fossil WF/OL in Namibia is imaged as a sub vertical, 14 km
deep, 10 km wide zone of high and anisotropic conductivity. The
present level of exhumation suggests that the WF/OL penetrated the
entire crust as a relatively narrow shear zone. Contrary to the
fluid driven conductivity anomalies of active faults, the anomaly
here is attributed to graphitic enrichment along former shear
planes. Once created, graphite is stable over very long time spans
and thus fault/shear zones may remain conductive long after
activity ceases.
(2005): Electrical conductivity images of active and fossil fault zones. High Strain Zones: Structure and Physical Properties, The Geological Society, 165-186.
(2005): Electrical conductivity images of active and fossil fault zones. High Strain Zones: Structure and Physical Properties, The Geological Society, 165-186.
| EDOC: 7549 | Abstract |

