Breccia formation by particle fluidization in fault zones: Implications for transitory, rupture-controlled fluid flow regimes in hydrothermal systems
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Cox, S. F.
Munroe, S. M.
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American Journal of Science
Abstract
Breccias in the Rusey Fault (Cornwall, UK) and the Roamane Fault
(Porgera gold deposit, Papua New Guinea) provide insights about the dynamics of
fluid flow and flow velocities when fault ruptures breach overpressured reservoirs of
hydrothermal fluid. These faults contain cockade-like breccias in which rock fragments
are mantled by spheroidal overgrowths of hydrothermal minerals. At Rusey, the
overgrowths are quartz-dominant, whereas in the Roamane Fault overgrowths are
composed of calcite, quartz, or gold-rich pyrite. Although none of the rock fragment
cores of accretionary spheroids are in contact with their neighbours, the spheroidal
overgrowths do contact each other and are at least partially cemented together. The
hydrothermal overgrowths mostly comprise either outwards coarsening crystals that
radiate from the surface of the core rock fragment, or finer-grained, inequigranular to
mesh-like intergrowths. Concentric textural banding and oscillatory growth zones are
present in some hydrothermal mantles.
The breccias occur as fault-parallel layers and lenses, each up to several tens of
centimeters thick. Adjacent layers are characterized by texturally-distinct ranges of
clast sizes and different proportions of clasts to hydrothermal overgrowths. In the
Rusey Fault, many texturally-distinct breccia layers are present within a 3m wide fault
core. Some layers truncate others and many breccia layers exhibit grainsize grading or
banding. Clasts in the breccias include fragments of wall-rock, veins and various fault
damage products, including fragments of earlier generations of cemented breccia.
Brecciation was episodic and separated by periods of cementation.
The distinctive textures of the breccias are interpreted to have formed by
fluidization of fault damage products in a high fluid flux regime. Hydrothermal
coatings developed while clasts were in a suspended state during fluid ascent through
dilatant fault segments. Layered breccias record multiple episodes of particle fluidization
and indicate that the faults provided conduits for repeated transitory fluid upflow.
Particle size distributions indicate that fluid velocities during fluidization were in the
range 0.1 ms⁻¹ to 1 ms⁻¹
. The maximum flow rates correspond to fluid fluxes of 10 to
100 L.s⁻¹ per meter strike length of fault through dilatant fault apertures up to several
tens of centimeters wide. Such high flow rates characteristically induce intense swarm
seismicity rather than mainshock-aftershock seismicity, and have implications for the
dynamics and rates of formation of fault-related hydrothermal ore deposits.
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American Journal of Science
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Open Access