4.5 Article

Lithological control on the deformation mechanism and the mode of fault slip on the Longitudinal Valley Fault, Taiwan

Journal

TECTONOPHYSICS
Volume 632, Issue -, Pages 48-63

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.tecto.2014.05.038

Keywords

Longitudinal Valley Fault; Aseismic slip; Deformation mechanism; Lichi Melange; Pressure solution creep; Frictional sliding

Funding

  1. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation [GBMF 423.01]
  2. Keck Institute for Spaces Studies at Caltech

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The Longitudinal Valley Fault (LVF) in Taiwan is creeping at shallow depth along its southern half, where it is bounded by the Lichi Melange. By contrast, the northern segment of the LVF is locked where it is bounded by forearc sedimentary and volcanoclastic formations. Structural and petrographic investigations show that the Lichi Melange most probably formed as a result of internal deformation of the forearc when the continental shelf of South China collided with the Luzon arc as a result of the subduction of the South China Sea beneath the Philippine Sea Plate. The forearc formations constitute the protolith of the Lichi Melange. It seems improbable that the mechanical properties of the minerals of the matrix (illite, chorite, kaolinite) in themselves explain the aseismic behavior of the LVF. Microstructural investigations show that deformation within the fault zone must have resulted from a combination of frictional sliding at grain boundaries, cataclasis (responsible for grain size comminution) and pressure solution creep (responsible for the development of the scaly foliation and favored by the mixing of soluble and insoluble minerals). The microstructure of the gouge formed in the Lichi Melange favors effective pressure solution creep, which inhibits strain-weakening brittle mechanisms and is probably responsible for the dominantly aseismic mode of fault slip. Since the Lichi Melange is analogous to any unlithified subduction melanges, this study sheds light on the mechanisms which favor aseismic creep on subduction megathrust. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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