Deformation and fluid flow during orogeny at the palaeo-Pacific active margin of Gondwana: the Early Palaeozoic Robertson Bay accretionary complex (north Victoria Land, Antarctica)
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2006
Abstract:
Structural investigations, integrated with X-ray diffraction, fluid inclusion microthermometry and
oxygen-stable isotope analyses are used to reconstruct the deformation history and the palaeo-fluid
circulation during formation of the low-grade, turbidite-dominated Early Palaeozoic Robertson Bay
accretionary complex of north Victoria Land (Antarctica). Evidence for progressive deformation is
elucidated by analysing the textural fabric of chronologically distinct, thrust-related quartz vein
generations, incrementally developed during progressive shortening and thickening of the Robertson
Bay accretionary complex. Our data attest that orogenic deformation was mainly controlled by
dissolution-precipitation creep, modulated by stress- and strain-rate-dependent fluid pressure cycling,
associated with local and regional permeability variations induced by the distribution and evolution of
the fracture network during regional thrusting. Fracture-related fluid pathways constituted efficient
conduits for episodic fluid flow. The dominant migrating fluid was pre-to-syn-folding and associated
with the migration of warm (160-200 C) nitrogen- and carbonic (CO2 and CH4)-bearing fluids. Both
fluid advection and diffusive mass transfer are recognized as operative mechanisms for fluid-rock
interaction and vein formation during continuous shortening. In particular, fluid-rock interaction was
the consequence of dissolution-precipitation creep assisted by tectonically driven cooling fluids moving
through the rock section as a result of seismic pumping. The most likely source of the migrating fluids
would be the frontal part of the growing accretionary complex, where fluids from the deep levels in the
hinterland are driven trough channelization operated by the thrust-related fracture (fault) systems.
Key words: accretionary complex; Antarctica; Early Palaeozoic; fluid flow; north Victoria Land;
thermobarometry.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Brilli, Mauro; Tecce, Francesca
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