Artigo Revisado por pares

How do the properties of a pre-existing normal-fault population influence fault development during a subsequent phase of extension?

2011; Elsevier BV; Volume: 33; Issue: 9 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.jsg.2011.06.010

ISSN

1873-1201

Autores

Alissa A. Henza, Martha O. Withjack, Roy W. Schlische,

Tópico(s)

High-pressure geophysics and materials

Resumo

We use scaled experimental (analog) models to investigate how the properties of a population of pre-existing normal faults influence fault development during a subsequent phase of extension. In the models, a homogeneous layer of wet clay undergoes two phases of extension whose extension directions differ by 45°. To vary the properties of the first-phase fault population, we vary the magnitude of the first-phase extension. As the magnitude of the first-phase extension increases, the number, average and maximum length, and average and maximum displacement of the first-phase normal faults increase. For a poorly developed first-phase fault population, new normal faults (which strike perpendicular to the second-phase extension direction) form during the second phase. For a well developed first-phase fault population, many first-phase normal faults are reactivated as oblique-slip faults during the second phase. New normal faults also form; these second-phase normal faults are shorter and have displacement maxima adjacent to the reactivated first-phase faults. They are less likely to cut the pre-existing first-phase faults than second-phase normal faults that form in models with a less developed first-phase fault population. In all models, pre-existing faults serve as nucleation sites for new faults. In models with a well developed first-phase fault population, the pre-existing faults also act as obstacles to the propagation of the second-phase normal faults. Fault geometries in the models vary considerably; parallel, zig-zag, or intersecting fault geometries develop depending on whether the first-phase fault population is poorly, moderately, or well developed, respectively.

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