Nature & Tectonic Significance of Fault Zone Weakening
Product code: SP186
Print publication date: 12/09/2001
Earth Resources and Economic Geology, Petroleum Geoscience and Geoenergy, Geological Society of London, GSL Special Publications
Type: Book (Hardback)
Binding: Hardback
ISBN: 9781862390904
Author/Edited by: Edited by R. E. Holdsworth (University of Durham, UK) & R. A. Strachan (Oxford Brookes University, UK), J. Magloughlin (Colorado State University, USA) & R. J. Knipe (University of Leeds, UK)
Weight: 1.2kg
Number of pages: 328
Lyell Collection URL: https://www.lyellcollection.org/toc/sp/186/1
£90.00
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Product Code: SP186
Edited by R. E. Holdsworth (University of Durham, UK) & R. A. Strachan (Oxford Brookes University, UK), J. Magloughlin (Colorado State University, USA) & R. J. Knipe (University of Leeds, UK)
Many faults appear to form persistent zones of weakness that fundamentally influence the distribution, architecture and movement patterns of crustal-scale deformation and associated process in both continental and oceanic regions. This book brings together papers by an international group of Earth Scientists to discuss a broad range of topics centred upon the controls of fault weakening and the role of such faults during lithosphere deformation. Readership:Academic structural-tectonic geologists, microstructural geologists, rheologists, geophysicists and people studying geodynamics. Also, petroleum geologists, hardrock geologists, mining geologists, hydrogeologists and metamorphic geologists. Suitable for postgraduate students.
The nature and tectonic significance of fault zone weakening: an introduction • Insights from neotectonic settings, deformation experiments and modelling studies • Implications of earthquake focal mechanisms for the frictional strength of the San Andreas fault system • Permeability variation across an active low-angle detachment, western Woodlark Basin (ODP Leg 180) and its implication for fault activation • Experimental constraints on the mechanical and hydraulic properties of deformation bands in porous sandstones: a review • Thermo-rheologic controls on deformation within oceanic transforms • Insights from natural fault rocks Clay mineral transformations and weakening mechanisms along the Alpine Fault, New Zealand • Deformation microfabrics of clay gouge, Lewis Thrust, Canada: a case for fault weakening from clay transformation • Microfracturing associated with reactivated fault zones and shear zones: what it can tell us about deformation history • Episodic weakening and strengthening during synmetamorphic deformation in a deep crustal shear zone in the Alps • Geometric controls and fault system evolution Geometric controls on the evolution of normal fault systems • The nature and origin of asymmetric arrays of shear surfaces in fault zones • A quantitative study of the influence of pre-existing compositional and fabric heterogeneities upon fracture zone development during basement reactivation • Insights from lithosphere- to crustal-scale fault zones Lithospheric and crustal reactivation of an ancient plate boundary: the assembly and disassembly of the Salmon River suture zone, Idaho, USA • Sequential ductile through brittle reactivation of major fault zones along the accretionary margin of Gondwana in Central Argentina • Rheological partitioning during multiple reactivation of the Palaeozoic Brevard Fault Zone, Southern Appalachians, USA • Repeated reactivation in the Apennine-Maghrebide system. Italy: an example of fault zone weakening ? • Weak zones in Precambrian Sweden • The role of fault zones and melts as agents of weakening, hardening and differentiation of the continental crust – a synthesis • Index. Principal Authors: J Townend, Stanford University, USA. A Kopf, Scripps Insitution of Oceanography, USA. I Main, University of Edinburgh, UK. K P Furlong, Pennsylvania State University, USA. L N Warr, Ruprecht-Karls-Universitat, Germany. Y Yan, University of Michigan, USA. G Mitra, University of Rochester, USA. K Steffen, University of New Mexico, USA. J J Walsh, University of Liverpool, UK. S F Wojtal, Oberlin College, USA. L E Beacom, Queen’s University of Belfast, Northern Ireland. B Tikoff, University of Wisconsin, USA. C Simpson, Boston University, USA. R D Hatcher, University of Tennessee, USA. E Tavernelli, Universita di Siena, Italy. C J Talbot, Uppsala University, Sweden. M R Handy, Universite de Lausanne, Switzerland.