10:45 AM - 12:15 PM
[SCG50-P07] Ductile fractures evolved from creep cavitation in the down-dip extension of seismogenic fault domains
Keywords:Electron backscattered diffraction, creep cavitation, fractures, microstructures
Microstructures of the mylonite samples were analysed using a combination of scanning electron microscope imaging and electron backscattered diffraction (EBSD). Previous work has shown that the samples were deformed at around 350 °C with varying degrees of mylonitisation (or strain) and that the mylonites are locally associated with a crushed zone. Ductile strain was quantified based on the quartz recrystallised fraction, revealed by applying the Gaussian mixture model to electron backscattered diffraction data (Yeo et al, 2023). Creep cavitation can be recognised through the presence of micro-voids, many of which are now filled with secondary precipitated minerals, and documenting these voids can reveal the relationship between cavity density and ductile strain. Current observations show that the number of micro-voids increase as the ductile strain increases towards the crushed zone. These spatial relationships suggest that growth and linking of micro-voids developed during mylonitic deformation may lead to the development of large fractures and rock failure.