JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting 2020

Presentation information

[J] Poster

S (Solid Earth Sciences ) » S-CG Complex & General

[S-CG69] Rheology, fracture and friction in Earth and planetary sciences

convener:Miki Tasaka(Shizuoka University), Osamu Kuwano(Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology), Ichiko Shimizu(Division of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University), Shintaro Azuma(Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, School of Science, Tokyo Institute of Technology)

[SCG69-P05] Image analysis on experimentally sheared granitic rocks: Shear zone development at brittle-ductile transition zone

*Shun Arai1, Jun Muto1, Takamoto Okudaira2, Daichi Iwata1 (1.Department of earth science, Tohoku University, 2.Department of Geosciences, Graduate School of Science, Osaka City University)

Keywords:Brittle-ductile transition zone, Griggs-type apparatus, Granitic rocks, Shear zone, Image analysis

Despite numerous experimental studies focusing on crustal rheology within the transition from brittle to semi-brittle (e.g., Bos and Spiers, 2002; Pec et al., 2012) and fully ductile (Holyoke and Tullis, 2006) regimes, associated with microstructural development including strain partitioning remain poorly understood. We report the results of Griggs-type solid medium deformation experiments using gneiss (Gneiss Minuti, the same material used in Holyoke and Tullis, 2006) composed of 20 ~ 30% quartz, 40 ~ 50% plagioclase, and 20 ~ 40% micas. Samples of ~1.2 mm in thickness are cut into halves in a direction normal to shear direction, after which a strip of Ni is inserted to serve as an in-situ strain marker. At temperature of 800°C, strain rate of 2 x 10-5 s-1, and confining pressure of 1.5 GPa, the peak strength measured 700 ~ 800 MPa at bulk shear strains (γ ≈ 1.0). The strength monotonously decreased towards 200 MPa, however steady-state flow was not achieved even for bulk γ ≈ 7.2. Electron dispersive spectroscopy in a scanning electron microscope (SEM-EDS) revealed that the sample deformed to bulk γ ≈ 7.2 developed several narrow shear bands. The shear bands are oriented oblique (20 ~ 30°) to the shear direction. Using the in-situ strain marker, the strain away from the shear zone is measured to be γ ~ 1.1, while the most of deformation is localized as slip along the shear bands. We analyzed back scattered electron (BSE) images of starting material and sheared samples (γ = 1.4 ~ 7.2) with the software “ImageJ” to analyze their microstructures. Analysis on quartz and biotite revealed the aspect ratio of grains increases, while the cross-sectional area of grains decreases with increase in shear strain. Most of grains are rotated toward shear direction, and the proportion of grains oriented to S-plane increases at high strain. Those microstructural characteristics indicate that grain size reduction and grain rotation progress in the host rock (outside of shear zone) by γ ~ 1.1, then the localized slip along the shear zone becomes dominant at higher strain. In the presentation, we will also report the deformation mechanism of each minerals as a function of strain.