A dynamic model for fault nucleation and propagation in a mechanically layered section |
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Authors: | Michael J. Welch Russell K. Davies Rob J. Knipe Christian Tueckmantel |
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Affiliation: | aRock Deformation Research Limited, School of Earth Sciences, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK;bRock Deformation Research USA Inc, P.O. Box 2998, McKinney, TX 75070-8998, USA |
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Abstract: | When a mechanically layered section of rock is subject to a horizontal strain, faults often nucleate preferentially in one or more layers before propagating through the rest of the section. The result is a high density of small, low-throw faults within these layers, and a much smaller number of large, through-cutting faults which nevertheless accommodate most of the strain due to their much larger displacement. A dynamic model of fault nucleation and propagation has been created by combining analytical and finite element techniques to calculate the energy balance of these propagating faults. This model shows that: 1) faults may nucleate in either mechanically weak layers, or in stiff layers with a high differential stress; 2) fault propagation may be halted either by strong layers (in which the sliding friction coefficient is high), or by layers which deform by flow and thus have low differential stress. This model can predict quantitatively the horizontal strain required for faults to nucleate, and to propagate across mechanical layer boundaries. The model is able to explain the complex pattern of fault nucleation and propagation observed in a mechanically layered outcrop in Sinai, Egypt. |
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Keywords: | Fault nucleation Fault propagation Modelling Strain energy |
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