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Fracture networks and fluid transport in active fault zones
Affiliation:1. Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy;2. Consiglio delle Nazionale Ricerche, IGAG, Rome, Italy;3. CERTEMA, Multidisciplinary technology laboratory, Cinigiano, Grosseto, Italy;4. INGV, Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Rome, Italy
Abstract:Field measurements were made of 1717 mineral-filled veins in the damage zone of an active dextral strike-slip fault zone in Iceland. Most veins are composed of quartz, chalcedony and zeolites, strike roughly parallel or perpendicular to the fault zone, and are members of dense palaeo-fluid transporting networks. A common vein frequency in these networks is 10 veins per metre. Cross-cutting relationships indicate that 79% of the veins are extension (mode I) cracks and 21% are shear cracks. The apertures of most veins, measured as mineral-fill thicknesses, are from 0.1 to 85 mm, and the aperture frequency distribution is a power law. The outcrop trace lengths of 384 veins (of the 1717) could be measured accurately. These 384 veins are mostly small and range in length from 2.5 to 400 cm, in aperture from 0.01 to 0.9 cm, and have an average length/aperture ratio of about 400. Simple analytical models are derived and used to make rough estimates of the volumetric flow rates in hydrofractures of dimensions equal to those of typical veins. The results indicate that volumetric flow rates for a horizontal fracture and a vertical fracture in a rigid (non-deforming) host rock would be around 1.5×10−4 and 8.9×10−4 m3s−1, respectively. The volumetric flow rate in a vertical fracture of equal size but in a deforming host rock, with buoyancy added to the pressure gradient, is around 1.3×10−3 m3s−1. Thus, vertical fluid transport is favoured under these conditions.
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